Boeing Receives Additional Wideband Global SATCOM Orders
Sept.
13,
2011
Boeing
received
a
$1.09
billion
contract
modification
from
the
U.S.
Air
Force
adding
funding
to
the
existing
Block
II
follow-on
contract
for
full
production,
launch
and
on-orbit
activation
of
the
seventh
Wideband
Global
SATCOM
(WGS)
satellite
and
procurement
of
long-lead
materials
for
an
eighth
satellite.
The
authorization
also
includes
options
for
the
full
production,
launch
and
on-orbit
activation
of
satellites
eight
and
nine. The
additional
orders
are
part
of
the
WGS
Block
II
follow-on
contract
awarded
in
August
2010.
"With
three
satellites
in
operation
today,
WGS
is
already
making
a
huge
difference
for
the
warfighter,"
said
Craig
Cooning,
vice
president
and
general
manager
of
Boeing
Space
&
Intelligence
Systems.
"Satellites
seven
and
eight
will
address
the
growing
demand
for
high-data-rate
services
worldwide."
The
contract
includes
production,
launch
site
activities,
and
initial
orbital
operations
and
checkout
for
each
satellite.
Boeing
also
is
working
with
the
Air
Force
on
potential
upgrades
that
would
further
increase
the
satellites'
capacity
and
operational
flexibility.
WGS
is
the
Department
of
Defense's
highest-capacity
communications
satellite
system.
The
three
satellites
currently
on
orbit
are
providing
more
than
30
times
the
communications
capacity
of
the
prior
Defense
Satellite
Communications
System
constellation.
"WGS
is
providing
tremendous
value
for
the
Department
of
Defense,"
said
Cooning.
"Boeing
has
worked
closely
with
the
Air
Force
to
implement
commercial
practices
to
drive
down
costs
so
that
this
critical
capability
can
continue
to
be
procured
and
fielded
despite
budget
challenges."
WGS
satellites
are
built
on
the
proven
Boeing
702HP
platform,
which
uses
a
highly
efficient
xenon-ion
propulsion
capability.
The
communications
payload
has
flexibility
features
that
are
important
to
the
military,
such
as
the
ability
to
interconnect
terminals
that
operate
in
different
frequency
bands
and
to
reposition
coverage
beams
based
on
evolving
mission
needs.
WGS
supports
missions
ranging
from
tactical
communications
to
and
between
ground
forces,
to
relaying
data
and
imagery
from
airborne
intelligence,
surveillance
and
reconnaissance
platforms.