Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Space and Missile Systems Center. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Space and Missile Systems Center. Mostrar todas las entradas

miércoles, 1 de abril de 2020

Space Force report on acquisition reforms awaiting final reviews


A report due to Congress on March 31 recommending changes to the acquisition process and organization for Space Force programs has been completed and awaits final reviews by senior leaders before it goes to Capitol HillAir Force Secretary Barbara Barrett is expected to sign off on the report this week.


The commander of the Space and Missile Systems Center Lt. Gen. John Thompson told last week that the acquisition recommendations are in line with the idea that space procurement programs have to be leaner and more agile: “I think it’s a bold report,” said Thompson. “I think many people across the defense industrial base and stakeholders will be very happy with this report.”


The 2020 National Defense Authorization Act directs the secretary of the Air Force to nominate an assistant secretary for space acquisition and integration to oversee all space acquisitions. Implementing this language would require the Air Force to break up the office of Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition Will Roper and create a co-equal separate office to oversee space programs. Roper has argued that it makes more sense to keep air and space acquisitions under a single authority because of the tight linkages between air and space programs. The issue of whether there should be a single acquisition executive for the Department of the Air Force or separate acquisition executives for air and space remains a sticking point in the reorganization, according to multiple sources.

miércoles, 25 de junio de 2014

Lockheed wins $1.9 billion deal


Funding completion of the fifth and sixth satellites in the SBIRS system, it will also fund completion the associated ground operations and processing updates.


SBIRS is a new U.S. strategic missile warning system that replaced the 1970s Defense Support Program satellites. It includes a mix of satellites in geostationary (GEO) orbit, sensors on other satellites in highly elliptical orbit, and ground hardware and software.


The contract, announced in the Pentagon's daily digest of major contract awards, runs through Sept. 30, 2022, and comes on top of advanced procurement funding awarded to Lockheed in 2012 and 2013 to start buying parts that take a long time to order. The first two GEO satellites started operations in 2013. The third GEO satellite is in testing and the fourth is in final assembly, Lockheed said.


U.S. Air Force Space Command's Space and Missile Systems Center said the contract award saved over $1 billion as a result of a block-buy contracting approach and production and management efficiencies: "We eliminated unnecessary layers of program oversight and contract reporting, restructured our test program and streamlined the production schedules," Colonel Mike Guetlein, production program manager, said in a statement.