Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong visited New Delhi this week for the last meeting of Quad foreign ministers. Despite concerns that the group may not hold up amid the current realignment of the U.S. worldview under President Donald Trump, the meeting made clear that the Quad could still prove useful to each of its members with its emphasis on economic resilience, technological coordination and supply chain security. The bloc is increasingly concerned with regional systems rather than conventional defense.
For Australia, this change is particularly significant. Canberra has long discussed that Indo-Pacific stability depends not only on military deterrence, but also on the protection of trade flows, energy supplies, critical technologies and economic sovereignty. The New Delhi meeting suggests that this conception of security is taking root within the Quad.
THE joint statement reflected this broader understanding of security. Maritime surveillance, cybersecurity, critical minerals, telecommunications, artificial intelligence, energy supply, disaster response and infrastructure resilience have all been treated as interconnected elements of the regional order. The group is now defining its role in collectively managing vulnerabilities in these areas across the Indo-Pacific.
For Australia, the major pillar of this cooperation is the new Quad project Critical Minerals Initiative Framework. The framework aims to coordinate the investment, extraction, processing, refining and recycling of strategic minerals among Quad members and other trusted partners. Although China is rarely mentioned in Quad statements, the intention of the initiative is clear: reduce reliance on Chinese-controlled supply chains for materials critical to advanced manufacturing, renewable technologies, semiconductors, batteries and defense industries.
Australia occupies a central position in this agenda. The country has significant reserves of lithium, cobalt, nickel and other essential minerals, but has historically exported these resources largely in raw form – with processing usually carried out in China. New Quad initiative aligns with Canberra’s ambition to move further along the value chain by developing national refining and processing capacity. Australia now wants position oneself not only as a career, but as an indispensable industry partner within a supply chain of “trusted partners”.
The other major pillar emerging from the New Delhi meeting is energy security. This was of course a tricky question to address given that the war between the United States and Iran has played a significant role in disrupting supply chains and making oil more expensive. THE energy security statement has highlighted new threats to shipping routes and how Indo-Pacific economies depend on maintaining consistent deliveries. In this area, Australia has long been vulnerable, being heavily dependent on imported refined fuel and having limited strategic reserves.
Australia has placed maritime lines of communication at the heart of its activities. national defense strategy. It centered the idea of itself as a maritime nation primarily concerned with fragile supply lines and maritime choke points. Although the United States may be close to oil self-sufficiency, Japan and India also rely heavily on these supply lines. This has been reflected in the Quad’s language on energy security, which treats this issue not just as a simple national economic issue, but as a collective strategic challenge requiring coordination among partners.
This is the logic that underpins Australia’s contemporary security arrangements, since AUKUS agreement until the deepening of Australian politics bilateral relationship with Japan. For Canberra, the Quad complements these arrangements with initiatives focused on specific issues, while also including India as a state critical to the balance of power in the Indian Ocean. The overlapping aspects of the Quad with other agreements are seen as strengthening Australia’s capabilities within a network of relationships and initiatives.
The goal of the Quad now seems to be find practical problems it can work collectively, as part of a broader agenda to protect the Indo-Pacific from coercion and disruption. Security is no longer seen as simply the defense of territory, but now involves protecting the functioning of society itself – its commercial networks, its technological systems, its industrial capacity and its economic autonomy.
Here, it appears that the Quad is heavily influenced by Australia’s decision to view its security as defending a “way of life.” Canberra see more and more the defense of liberal democratic society as inseparable from the resilience of the economic and technological systems that support it. The evolution of the Quad suggests that this understanding is now shared more widely by the major democracies of the Indo-Pacific.
