WA · Western AustraliaUpdated April 2026

AI Services in Western Australia

AI strategy, training, automations and AI search for WA's mining, resources, energy, oil & gas, and professional services sectors — under the WA AI Policy and Assurance Framework + the A$900M Digital Capability Fund.

Key Takeaways

  • WA had the nation's fastest-growing technology sector with workforce up just under 16% in a single year (ACS).
  • The WA Digital Capability Fund totals A$900M (A$500M original + A$400M top-up) — among the largest state digital investments in Australia.
  • Rio Tinto's AutoHaul, BHP's IROC Perth, and Fortescue operate the world's most ambitious mining-AI deployments — ~200 autonomous trucks, 50+ autonomous trains, 1,500km automated rail network.
  • The WA Government AI Policy and Assurance Framework requires AI assessments above thresholds to go through the WA AI Advisory Board.

Western Australia industry context

WA's economy concentrates mining, resources, oil & gas, and energy transition — sectors where applied AI delivers the highest commercial impact in Australia. Rio Tinto's A$940M AutoHaul programme made it the world's first automated heavy-haul freight railway (50+ unmanned trains across 1,500km of Pilbara network). BHP's IROC in Perth's St Georges Terrace has run 24/7/365 since end-2012, with autonomous trucks at Jimblebar reducing haulage costs ~20%. Fortescue's ~200 autonomous trucks have travelled 52M+ km moving 1.5 billion tonnes; the 2024 Liebherr partnership is building the world's first zero-emission AHS.

Perth professional services support these miners — engineering consultancies, environmental services, financial services serving the resources sector, technical training, equipment manufacturing. Each has direct AI-adoption pressure as the miners they support continue automating.

Regional WA is more remote and resources-concentrated than other states' regional bases. Karratha + Port Hedland (Pilbara mining), Kalgoorlie (gold), Bunbury + Mandurah (services + tourism), Geraldton (port + agriculture + offshore wind potential). Regional WA AI work often involves remote-operations support, intermittent-connectivity patterns, and FIFO workforce considerations.

WA AI Policy and Assurance Framework + Digital Capability Fund

WA's AI governance combines a state framework with the largest state digital investment fund in Australia

The WA Government AI Policy and Assurance Framework is the state-level operational framework. AI projects above certain thresholds — particularly any receiving funding through the A$900M Digital Capability Fund (A$500M original 2021 + A$400M 2024 top-up) — must submit completed assessments for review by the WA AI Advisory Board.

WA also signed onto the National Framework for the Assurance of AI in Government in June 2024, aligning with NSW + Victoria. WA private-sector enterprises increasingly use the framework as their internal governance baseline, particularly given the state's procurement scale and the resources-sector AI maturity.

Western Australia AI ecosystem

WA's AI research is anchored by the Curtin Institute for Data Science — Australia's largest university-based data science research institute, directed by Prof Melanie Johnston-Hollitt. The UWA Data Institute, UWA School of Computer Science (Winthrop Prof Mohammed Bennamoun, h-index 71), the UWA Robotics & Automation Lab under Prof Thomas Bräunl, and the Pawsey Supercomputing Research Centre round out the state's research base.