
The Australian first which could save thousands worldwide
Landmine clearance operations are slow, and current devices typically detect metal, leading to hundreds of false positives, as former battlefields are also littered with shrapnel, debris and other metal. Many mines are now made from plastic, partly because it's difficult to detect. Trials for the MRead technology took place in Angola on the same minefields that Princess Diana visited in the 1990s. Conducted in collaboration with demining organisation The HALO Trust, the trials demonstrated the device's ability to detect the explosive compound RDX. But the team was only halfway there.
TNT, the most common explosive used in landmines, was successfully identified in laboratory testing in Australia last month — a major breakthrough. Bruce Edwards, head of partnerships at The Halo Trust, said, "I'm a big fan of saying there is no silver bullet in our work, and people ask about game changers all the time." "If we can have a detector that does detect both RDX and TNT within metal and plastic mines, then this has got to be close to a game changer. " The team hopes the lab results will translate to reality.
A new prototype that can detect both TNT and RDX, explosives believed to be found in 90 per cent of mines globally, is now in development, with active minefield trials expected to start in 2026. Edwards said: "As I said, no silver bullet, but definitely a breakthrough. It is exciting. Absolutely. And as an Australian, I've got to say, it is quite nice to have this Australian contribution being made across the world and I'd love to see them in Ukraine."
Ukraine is now believed to be the most dangerous place on Earth for unexploded weapons. It's estimated millions of explosives have been strewn across battlefields in Ukraine since Russia's invasion in 2022. Almost a quarter of the country is at risk of contamination, and it could take decades to eliminate these invisible threats from the land. Edwards, who is now based in Mykolaiv, is the former Australian Ambassador to Ukraine, said: "Our CEO has described landmines as the 'eternal vigilant sentry' and no better is that demonstrated in the likes of Angola, one of our largest programs. "In Cambodia, in Afghanistan, Sri Lanka ... still we're seeing deaths and inaccessibility due to these wars that for many people will be far, far from their memory."
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