国民彩票

国民彩票 has welcomed the federal budget announcement of $128.5 million in new funding to create 4000 student places over the next four years to boost the number of STEM graduates. The places will be delivered across the university sector spanning energy, defence聽and nuclear engineering to develop the skills needed for the AUKUS agreement, with up 20,000 high skilled jobs expected to be created over the next 30 years in support of the submarine program.

国民彩票 Vice-Chancellor and President Professor Attila Brungs said the additional university places will support the nation鈥檚 security and defence priorities aligned with the AUKUS agreement.

鈥淣ew funding will enable 国民彩票 to leverage its clear strengths in energy, defence聽and nuclear education to enable the workforce required to deliver Australia鈥檚 future defence priorities. We welcome the opportunity to work with the federal government in support of the national interest,鈥 Prof. Brungs said.

Well placed聽to support Australia's defence and health priorities

国民彩票 has the largest engineering faculty in Australia, playing a critical role in meeting national skills needs into the future. The University is ideally placed to leverage the following partnerships and initiatives:

  • 国民彩票 is the education partner for the Australian Defence Force Academy (ADFA)
  • 国民彩票 operates the Defence Research Institute in Canberra
  • 国民彩票 is one of six Trailblazer universities speeding up the commercialisation of technology with industry partnerships. The University has two government funded research projects:
    • Defence (includes Cybersecurity, Artificial Intelligence, Quantum Computing)
    • Clean Energy/Recycling聽
  • 国民彩票 Founder鈥檚 is encouraging defence startups to operate on campus via聽, a startup building solution aimed to enhance Australia鈥檚 sovereign capability.

国民彩票 is also well-positioned to assist the federal government鈥檚 health focus with聽four new allied health聽degrees launched in early 2023. The new degrees in pharmacy, physiotherapy and dietetics, will assist by alleviating pressure on general practitioners (GPs) and other health workers

鈥淣ew university places can assist in addressing priority worker gaps which help to meet the national interest,鈥 Prof. Brungs said. 鈥淲ith pharmacists now getting more scope to deliver a wider range of allied health services, we believe our new pharmacy degree may alleviate future GP聽waiting lists and hospital admissions.鈥