Intelligence; Optimised Podcast

Todd Crowley

In this series our Indo-Pacific experts navigate the complexities of safeguarding our present and fortifying our future in these uncertain times.  Our focus is on delivering expert analyses and insights under the national security umbrella, to help you: "Be Ready for Today. Prepared for Tomorrow." This series is crafted for a discerning audience, including defence professionals, policymakers, academics, technology experts , logistics and supply chain managers, public health officials, and food and agribusiness purveyors. It's designed for those who seek to stay ahead of the curve in understanding and implementing the cutting-edge strategies and technologies that define global security today and shape its evolution tomorrow. The “Vaxa Bureau - Intelligence; Optimised Podcast” is a part of the Vaxa Grow Series and brought to you by the Vaxa Bureau team.  Find out more: https://vaxabureau.com/ 

  1. 4d ago

    #72 China Can Cut the Pacific's Internet. Australia Has No Plan B | Todd Crowley

    Picture a cable roughly the diameter of a garden hose lying on the ocean floor, 3,500 metres down. It carries 95% of international data traffic, including classified military communications, financial transactions, and the digital nervous system of the Second Island Chain. Now consider this: a recent CSIS report confirms that China has already demonstrated the capability to sever these cables at extreme depths silently and with plausible deniability. In this episode of Intelligence Optimised, Todd Crowley cuts through the noise surrounding Indo-Pacific security to confront the single most critical infrastructure vulnerability facing Australia and its allies. While deep-sea infrastructure sits at the heart of allied interoperability and AUKUS integration, Australia currently lacks an operationally tested contingency plan for a realistic cable-cut scenario. Using the real-world example of Taiwan’s Matsu Islands—where cables were severed 12 times in a single year—Todd maps out why our current reliance on satellite backups and commercial workarounds like Starlink will fail under pressure. Commercial and military networks share the same physical infrastructure, meaning a coordinated attack on regional connectivity strikes both targets at once.  This is not about speculative threat modelling; it is about infrastructure intelligence. If a Pacific contingency occurs, deep-sea sabotage will not just disrupt communications for an afternoon—it will freeze financial markets and blind command structures during the critical initial 72-hour window. To lift regional resilience and protect Australian national interests, Todd outlines three practical steps for defence planners and critical industry executives: 1. Enact genuine geographic routing redundancy to eliminate single-point failures. 2. Preposition dedicated cable repair capacity within the Indo-Pacific to reduce multi-week repair timelines. 3. Build and rigorously test a degraded communications operating concept for ADF command and control. We cannot wait for a crisis to force these questions. Lift your operational capability by planning backwards from a degraded state. Find deeper briefs, structural insights, and secure intelligence analysis inside Vaxa Bureau.

    10 min
  2. Jun 9

    #71 700 Million Hungry Neighbours. Apparently That's Not a Market. | Part 2

    Australia produces some of the cleanest, highest-quality food on the planet. But less than two percent of global venture capital flows into agriculture and food technology, a sector that represents roughly twelve to thirteen percent of Australian GDP. That gap is not a minor inefficiency. It is a structural vulnerability. In Part 2 of this conversation, Todd Crowley continues with Mark Gustowski and Timothy Hui from Mandalay Venture Partners to examine exactly where that capital needs to go and what happens when it doesn't arrive in time. The discussion opens on Harvest Bee, a plant protein company that has solved two problems most alternative protein players haven't: texture and label cleanliness. With around a dozen ingredients and a dehydrated format that needs no cold chain, Harvest Bee is positioned for markets where infrastructure is the limiting factor, including Indonesia's presidential school feeding programme, which aims to put one meal a day in front of every child across an archipelago with serious logistics constraints. From there the conversation moves to Health Food Symmetry, a functional fibre company targeting the gap left by inulin in the baking and cereals industry. Mark and Tim frame fibre as the next macro-nutrient investment wave after protein — and the internal tension at Mandalay is less about whether to back it than when the broader market will arrive. That timing question is the spine of the episode. Agri-food VC exits cluster in the $200 million to $600 million range. The category consistently delivers top-quartile returns when managed with domain expertise. But internal rate of return is a function of time, not just outcome and getting the commercialisation cycle, company readiness, and acquirer appetite to align simultaneously is where the real work happens. The episode closes with a flag on Global AgInvest Australia in Brisbane, June 10 to 11 - the first time the event has left New York and Tokyo - a signal of where the region is heading. For deeper briefs on agri-food capability and Indo-Pacific food security, find the analysis inside Vaxa Bureau.

    29 min
  3. May 20

    #69 ADF trained her to run a field hospital. She built the second one herself| Wing Commander Dr. Ajitha

    What happens when the officer commanding Australia's forward-deployed surgical unit runs the same mission on her own time - faster, leaner, and without a joint logistics unit behind her? Wing Commander Dr Ajitha Sugnanam commands 1 Expeditionary Health Squadron, the RAAF unit responsible for delivering surgical capability in austere operational environments. She also founded the Esesson Foundation, which has deployed clinical teams across 14 countries using a supply chain built from Toll freight partnerships, in-country pharmacies, government-coordinated visas, accommodation and flights, and volunteer clinicians giving up their weekends. The comparison is instructive and uncomfortable. The ADF model is self-contained by design - own aircraft, loadmasters, pharmaceutical pipelines, joint logistics support. Essosson achieves comparable clinical outcomes at a fraction of the cost by building trust-based collaborative supply chains and training local capacity rather than replacing it. This episode forces three questions every defence capability planner should sit with: - If your forward surgical capability depends on a self-contained logistics chain, what happens when that chain is contested or unavailable? - The same clinician shortage constraining civilian health in PNG will constrain your coalition surgical capacity. Are those risks being assessed together or in separate columns? - When a CO can do it lighter and faster outside the wire, what does that tell you about how defence capability is being designed, funded, and measured? Dr Sugnanam is direct about the gap between military mindset and civilian adaptability in field operations — and about what resource-constrained deployments teach practitioners that no garrison environment can. The operational lessons here apply directly to how Australia plans, equips, and sustains forward health capability across the Indo-Pacific. If your portfolio touches force health readiness, ADF expeditionary capability, or defence logistics, this conversation will sharpen how you read the next capability review. Find deeper analysis and briefs inside Vaxa Bureau.

    46 min
  4. May 6

    #68 Australia Was Warned About Its Fertiliser Vulnerability. Nobody Acted. | John Cotter

    Australia feeds the region, but the mineral that makes that possible is almost entirely imported, processed offshore, and held in supply chains that break on a predictable cycle. In this episode of Intelligence Optimised, Todd Crowley sits down with John Cotter, founder of Northwest Phosphate and the man sitting on the largest phosphate deposit in Australia, 130km northwest of Mount Isa. The conversation was recorded before the current global fertiliser crisis. Listen to how accurate the warning was. Then ask yourself why nobody moved on it. Phosphate is the kickoff nutrient for photosynthesis and root development. Without it, crop yields collapse quickly. Australia has no strategic fertiliser reserve - none. Phosphate Hill mine at Mount Isa has shut. The single super plant in Geelong is gone. Wesfarmers CSP in Perth is closed. We are down to one domestic phosphate rock miner. That miner is Northwest Phosphate. Their Paradise South deposit holds 201 million tonnes of measured reserve in Stage 1, with a total resource close to 800 million tonnes at 34.5–35% P2O5 - above the global benchmark. The path to market runs through repurposed Century Mine infrastructure: a $2 billion-plus flotation plant and a 304km slurry line to the Port of Karumba, keeping 400 jobs in one of Australia's most remote regions for another 50 to 100 years. The strategic picture goes further than food. Downstream processing of this phosphate rock produces high-grade phosphoric acid, a direct feedstock for lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries. The calcium gypsum by-product carries light and heavy rare earths used in military platform manufacturing. One resource. Four sovereign capability threads: food, fertiliser, batteries, defence materials. John also maps what happens in the first 24 hours of a supply chain cutoff, which plants get nationalised, which inputs disappear, and why Australia's position is structurally identical to its AdBlue exposure and its single remaining vaccine batch facility. This is the episode for food security planners, critical minerals program owners, and anyone whose portfolio depends on assumptions that have never been stress-tested. Find deeper briefs inside Vaxa Bureau.

    54 min
  5. Apr 15

    #66 The 'Australian Made' Battery Illusion | Dominic Spooner - Part 1

    Australia commissioned more grid-scale battery storage in 2025 than in the previous eight years combined. Most of those systems provide two to three hours of support. In January this year, the worst heatwave in six years tested that limit. In October 2025, China expanded export controls on LFP cathode materials, anode precursors, and battery production equipment. Under diplomatic pressure, those controls were paused. That pause expires November 2026. Most organisations filed it as resolved. It was a reprieve. In Part 1 of this episode of Intelligence Optimised, Todd Crowley speaks with Dominic Spooner — founder and CEO of Volta, a battery energy storage company that builds systems in Brisbane rather than simply assembling imported cells. Together they work through what sovereign battery manufacturing actually means, why the Australian made label frequently masks deep foreign supply chain dependence, and what the China export control sequence tells us about where Australia genuinely sits on the energy security risk spectrum. Key questions the episode works through: When "Australian made" on a battery means an ABN and an overseasproduct, what is the government actually procuring?LFP cell chemistry is essentially exclusively sourced from China.What does that mean for any operations manager whose infrastructure depends on it?What does battery resilience look like when it is tested not in a procurement document but in a cyclone — specifically, Cyclone Alfred on Moreton Island?Why do most battery companies refuse to provide cell-level visibility to operators, and what does that cost when a system is deployed somewhere you cannot reach quickly?Energy resilience is an engineering outcome, not a policy setting. But you need the right policies to get there. Australia does not currently have them. This conversation sits at the intersection of sovereign capability, critical infrastructure resilience, and Indo-Pacific supply chain risk. The dependency is not theoretical. The timeline is not distant. Find deeper analysis and capability briefs inside Vaxa Bureau.

    25 min
  6. Apr 7

    #65 We Feed the World. We Can't Feed Ourselves | The Labour Crisis | Kate Banville Pt. 2

    Australia's agricultural sector faces simultaneous failures in fuel, fertiliser, and labour inputs. This is Part 2 of Todd Crowley's conversation with Kate Banville — journalist, former soldier, and reporter who covers agriculture and national security as interconnected risks. Todd and Kate dissect the labour crisis: the sector employed 247,000 on average last year, down over 10% year-on-year. Hours worked hit the lowest ever in August 2025. The Food Supply Chain Alliance flagged a 172,000 worker shortfall. Median farmer age tops 53; beef exceeds 60. The PALM scheme patches backpacker gaps from COVID but falls short and adds dependency — importing Pacific labour to harvest imported-input crops on foreign fuels and vessels. They frame the stakes: one input failure is policy-manageable. Two is systemic threat. Three at once, sans buffers, is existential. Kate concurs; we're there now. Community livability (childcare, hospitals, pubs) drives rural decline; farms can't run without viable towns. Kate draws COVID lessons: better fuel stocks then, no shortages despite lockdowns. Australia has untapped options — North Queensland biofuels from cane, domestic fertiliser alternatives — held back by funding, viability, policy. Farmers ration now; decisions lag to yields (6-12 months) then shelves. Supply fails before demand; resilience buys time, but 12-24 months starves operations. Episode closes reframing sovereignty: not just growing food (Australia produces enough for 3x population), but inputs sans fragile chains. Tanks sit empty. Find deeper briefs inside Vaxa Bureau at vaxabureau.com.

    30 min

About

In this series our Indo-Pacific experts navigate the complexities of safeguarding our present and fortifying our future in these uncertain times.  Our focus is on delivering expert analyses and insights under the national security umbrella, to help you: "Be Ready for Today. Prepared for Tomorrow." This series is crafted for a discerning audience, including defence professionals, policymakers, academics, technology experts , logistics and supply chain managers, public health officials, and food and agribusiness purveyors. It's designed for those who seek to stay ahead of the curve in understanding and implementing the cutting-edge strategies and technologies that define global security today and shape its evolution tomorrow. The “Vaxa Bureau - Intelligence; Optimised Podcast” is a part of the Vaxa Grow Series and brought to you by the Vaxa Bureau team.  Find out more: https://vaxabureau.com/ 

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