Lockheed Martin
Selected to Deliver 36 Small Satellites
to Advance Space Development Agency's
Communications Network
Aug. 21, 2023
The Space
Development Agency awarded Lockheed
Martin a firm-fixed price agreement
valued at approximately $816 million to
build 36 Tranche 2 Transport Layer
(T2TL) Beta satellites. T2TL is part of
an overarching plan to strengthen
deterrence with more resilient space
architectures for beyond line-of-sight
(BLOS) targeting, data transport, and
advanced missile detection and tracking.
The T2TL Beta
variant satellites will work in tandem
with SDA's Tranche 1 and Tranche 2
networks. They will advance the initial
warfighting capability with targeted
technology enhancements, mission-focused
payload configurations, and increased
integration.
SDA awarded
Lockheed Martin an agreement worth
approximately $816 million for 36
Tranche 2 Transport Layer satellites
"Tranche 2 will
significantly enhance our warfighters'
capabilities and establish new levels of
resiliency, connectivity, and orbital
diversity that are necessary for
countering future threats," said Joe
Rickers, Lockheed Martin's vice
president for Protected Communications.
"SDA's unique acquisition approach
expedites the proliferation of this
critical technology, and Lockheed
Martin's strategic partnerships with a
network of suppliers and small
businesses will ensure we're aligned
with SDA's strategy for accelerated
delivery."
T2TL Beta will
consist of 72 satellites and will be
deployed into orbit over a series of
launches beginning in 2026 and will
undergo a continuous checkout and
commissioning process for acceptance
into operations. With this award,
Lockheed Martin will deliver at least 88
data communications satellites for SDA's
low-Earth orbit military constellation.
The company's 10 Tranche 0 Transport
Layer (T0TL) satellites will launch in
2023, while its 42 Tranche 1 satellites
are in production and on track for a
2024 launch.
Lockheed Martin
will deliver advanced technology on its
T2TL Beta satellites to enable the
proliferated global network and maintain
the Proliferated Warfighter Space
Architecture's technological and
military advantages in space through a
hybrid enterprise.
To deliver and
innovate at speed and scale, Lockheed
Martin recently opened a 20,000
square-foot small satellite processing
center that is scaled to efficiently
assemble, integrate and test smallsats.
The facility, which will house Lockheed
Martin's T1TL and T2TL Beta satellites,
features six parallel assembly lines and
dedicated test chambers to deliver 180
satellites or more per year to help
enable customers' strategy.