
Australian digital and extended reality systems provider Vection Technologies has secured a major contract to deliver digital defense infrastructure for a NATO-approved partner in Europe. The agreement is the largest in the company’s history, valued at 22.3 million Australian dollars ($14.7 million) and expected to run through the end of the decade. Under the current terms, the deal could expand to 29.5 million Australian dollars ($19.4 million).
The contract centers on Vection’s INTEGRATEDXR platform, which merges artificial intelligence with advanced digital visualization technologies. The system allows defense operators to analyze and interact with complex data using secure communications, simulations, and immersive digital displays. First piloted in 2023, INTEGRATEDXR will now be scaled to safeguard critical defense facilities across Europe.
Vection emphasized that the new program will be executed using its existing resources, with no additional investment required. The European partner, whose name has not been disclosed, is certified to provide services to NATO and the Council of Europe and already collaborates with several leading defense contractors in the region.
With this latest deal, Vection’s total digital defense initiative now stands at 40 million Australian dollars ($26.4 million). This figure includes 17.7 million ($11.6 million) in earlier agreements and 10.3 million ($6.8 million) worth of completed deliveries. Should the program reach its full potential, it could total 47.2 million Australian dollars ($31.1 million) by 2030, solidifying Vection’s growing role in Europe’s defense modernization.