Lockheed Martin Submits Proposal For The U.S. Air Force's
Satellite Hosted Payload Initiative
Sept.
24, 2013
Lockheed
Martin submitted its competitive proposal for the U.S. Air
Force's Hosted Payload Solutions (HoPS) initiative aimed at
leveraging commercial satellites for some government
missions.
According to the
August 1 government
solicitation, HoPS will provide the Air Force Space and
Missile Systems Center (SMC) and other U.S. government
organizations with "a capability for hosting Government
payloads on commercial spacecraft to meet mission
objectives." The HoPS contract will procure a fully
functioning on-orbit hosted payload system and integrated
ground system equipment and interfaces that deliver payload
data to the government end user. SMC's Developmental
Planning Directorate is the acquisition office for HoPS.
In the satellite industry, it is
common for multiple payloads – electronics and sensors
packages designed for specific missions – to be mounted, or
hosted, on a spacecraft to share launch, propulsion and
power services, and their costs. From Lockheed Martin's
perspective, hosting government payloads on commercial
spacecraft is an innovative approach that could address some
of the U.S. government's needs for future satellite missions
in challenging times.
"We believe that the Air Force's
HoPS initiative will be a very useful tool in finding the
nexus of capability, affordability, and resilience for
critical national space missions,"
Mark Valerio, vice
president of Lockheed Martin's Military Space line of
business, said.
According to Valerio, Lockheed
Martin's proposal provides a roadmap for this vision of the
future. It combines the company's strong experience in
commercial space, mission engineering, and system solutions
with its broad commercial industry ties to bring forward
affordable payload opportunities at the right time and the
right place for mission needs.
"We are certainly known for
satellites, but we have a long history of developing and
integrating hosted payloads onto spacecraft as well,"
Valerio continued. "In fact, just since 2000, Lockheed
Martin has delivered 84 payloads on 16 different types of
satellites from multiple manufacturers. Three of these
have been Government payloads integrated on commercial hosts
where we solved the business and technical aspects of the
integration challenge."
"We are proud and eager to partner
with the Air Force in pursuit of this best-balance approach
for national space missions and we are committed to building
on our 50-year partnership to serve in that capacity,"
Valerio added.