Australia Is Building Big. Fire Protection Is the Career That Follows Every Project.
When news broke this week that locally manufactured components are now driving Australia's landmark AUKUS submarine sustainment effort, most of the headlines focused on the naval engineering and defence manufacturing angles. Fair enough — it's a genuinely historic moment for Australian industry.
But if you work in fire protection, or you're thinking about breaking into the trade, there's a storyline running underneath these big infrastructure announcements that deserves your full attention.
Every large-scale manufacturing facility, every defence installation, every new transport depot running WA's freshly unveiled electric bendy buses — all of it requires fire protection systems. Designed, installed, tested, and maintained by qualified tradespeople holding current Australian certifications. The building boom is well documented. The fire protection workforce demand that shadows it? Less so.
Let's fix that.
What the Manufacturing Headlines Are Really Telling Fire Protection Workers
Australia's advanced manufacturing sector is expanding on multiple fronts simultaneously. Austal is backing an additive manufacturing framework for maritime and defence. KONGSBERG Australia recently shipped its first South Australian-made naval missile consoles to a NATO nation. Adelaide researchers are developing swarm robots for future mining operations.
These aren't isolated announcements. They represent a structural shift — Australia is rebuilding its industrial base after decades of offshoring, and the federal and state governments are funding it heavily.
What does that mean in practical terms for fire protection?
New facilities need fire systems from day one. Defence manufacturing plants, advanced fabrication workshops, battery storage facilities for electric vehicle fleets, and clean-tech refineries like MCi Carbon's recently opened Newcastle carbon refinery all carry significant fire risk profiles. They require compliant suppression systems, detection networks, emergency evacuation infrastructure, and ongoing maintenance contracts — none of which can legally proceed without licensed fire protection professionals.
As Australian Manufacturing has been reporting, the pace of new industrial facility construction and fit-out across NSW, QLD, SA, and WA is accelerating. Fire protection tradies who get their certifications right are walking into a market where demand is outpacing supply.
The Certification Landscape: What You Actually Need
Fire protection in Australia isn't a single trade — it's a cluster of specialisations, each with its own licensing and certification requirements. Understanding the pathway is half the battle.
Fire Protection Plumber (Hydraulic Systems)
This is the most common entry point. Fire protection plumbing covers the installation and maintenance of sprinkler systems, hydrants, and hose reels. You'll need a Certificate III in Plumbing (CPC30620) with a fire protection stream, followed by a licence through your state authority — Fair Trading NSW, the Victorian Building Authority, the Queensland Building and Construction Commission, or equivalent in WA and SA.
Most states require supervised on-the-job hours before you can apply for a full licence. Budget 12–24 months post-qualification before you're operating independently.
Fire Detection and Warning Systems Technician
This covers the installation, commissioning, and maintenance of fire alarm panels, smoke detectors, heat detectors, and emergency warning and intercommunication systems (EWIS). Licensing sits under electrical or low-voltage streams in most states, so you'll typically need a relevant electrical qualification plus endorsement for fire detection work.
With the volume of new advanced manufacturing and defence facilities coming online, detection technicians are in particularly short supply. Industrial environments — think battery manufacturing, chemical processing, and additive manufacturing facilities — have complex fire detection requirements that demand experienced hands.
Fire Protection Inspector and Tester
Once systems are installed, they need regular inspection and testing to comply with AS 1851 (Routine Service of Fire Protection Systems and Equipment). Inspectors and testers work across a wide range of commercial and industrial sites. Entry typically requires relevant trade experience and a Certificate III or IV in Fire Protection Inspection and Testing (FPJ30115 / FPJ40215).
This is a strong career step for experienced tradies looking to move off the tools into more supervisory and compliance-focused roles.
Building Fire Safety — Consultant and Auditor Pathway
At the senior end, fire safety consultants and building auditors advise on fire engineering, code compliance, and risk management. This pathway generally requires a degree in fire safety engineering or building surveying, plus years of field experience. It's a long road, but the remuneration reflects it — senior fire safety consultants in Australia regularly command $120,000–$160,000+ per year.
Check our salary guide for current benchmarks across trades and specialist roles in fire protection and related industries.
Why This Moment Is Different for Fire Protection Workers
The fire protection industry has always provided steady work — buildings need compliant systems regardless of economic conditions. But what's different right now is the concentration of complex, high-value projects coming online simultaneously.
Defence manufacturing facilities have strict fire suppression requirements that go beyond standard AS 2118 sprinkler compliance. Electric vehicle manufacturing and battery storage facilities present novel fire risks that are pushing engineers and installers to upskill rapidly. Hydrogen production and carbon refinery operations — like MCi Carbon's Myrtle facility in Newcastle — operate under hazardous area classification requirements that demand specialist knowledge.
For fire protection workers willing to invest in specialist training and certification, the earning premium in these environments is significant. Site allowances, hazardous area loadings, and defence security clearance bonuses can add meaningful dollars to your base rate.
What Employers Are Looking For Right Now
Talking to hiring managers and labour hire coordinators across the country, a few consistent themes come up when discussing fire protection recruitment:
- Current licences and no gaps. State-specific fire protection licences must be current and verifiable. Lapses due to CPD shortfalls are a red flag that costs candidates jobs.
- AS 1851 familiarity. Knowledge of routine service requirements under AS 1851 is almost universally required for maintenance roles.
- WHS induction readiness. Major industrial and defence sites run full WHS inductions — workers who arrive with their general construction induction (White Card), first aid certificate, and relevant site inductions already completed save employers time and get placed faster.
- Adaptability across systems. Workers comfortable across multiple suppression technologies — wet pipe, dry pipe, gaseous suppression, foam — are more deployable and more valuable.
If you're looking to get in front of the right employers, register as a candidate with a specialist recruiter who understands the technical requirements of the fire protection space.
What This Means for Fire Protection Workers and Employers
For workers: The intersection of Australia's manufacturing revival and infrastructure pipeline is creating durable, long-term demand for qualified fire protection professionals. Now is the time to audit your certifications, close any CPD gaps, and consider specialist upskilling in high-growth areas like industrial suppression and hazardous area systems. The tradies who invest in credentials today will be first in line as the next wave of defence and advanced manufacturing facilities move from groundbreaking to fit-out.
For employers: If you're managing fire protection contracts on large-scale projects, workforce planning needs to start well ahead of your installation schedule. The pool of workers with both the right licences and relevant industrial experience is genuinely constrained. Early engagement with a labour hire services partner who has pre-vetted, licenced fire protection workers on the books will be the difference between hitting your programme and sitting on delays.
Harrison Barratt Group: Fire Protection Workforce, Sorted
Harrison Barratt Group places qualified fire protection workers — plumbers, detection technicians, inspectors, and project supervisors — across NSW, QLD, VIC, WA, and SA. We understand the licensing requirements in every state, and we pre-screen every candidate for current certification before they're ever presented to a client.
Whether you're a tradie looking for your next fire protection role or a project manager who needs to resource a major installation, talk to the team at Harrison Barratt Group. Explore our permanent recruitment options for specialist fire protection roles, or get in touch to request a quote for flexible labour hire on your next project.