U.S. Air Force Awards Lockheed Martin Contract
To Complete Two More GPS III Satellites
Dec. 16, 2013
The U.S. Air Force has
awarded Lockheed Martin more than
$200 million
in contract options to complete production of
its fifth and sixth next-generation Global
Positioning System satellites, known as GPS III.
In February, the Air
Force awarded Lockheed Martin a fixed price
$120 million
contract to procure long lead parts for a second
set of four GPS III space vehicles (SV
05-08). This new award provides funding to
complete the first two satellites (SV 05-06) in
this order. Full production funding for
the next two space vehicles (SV 07-08) is
expected in 2014.
Lockheed Martin is
already under contract to produce four GPS III
space vehicles (SV 01-04). The first two
GPS III satellites are currently on the
production floor at Lockheed Martin's GPS III
Processing Facility (GPF)
in
Denver, Colo.
"Lockheed Martin's GPS
III program has a rigorous testing plan and
mission success focus aligned with the Air
Force's back-to-basics approach, and is
specifically designed to enable predictable and
affordable recurring production through
disciplined development and early risk
reduction," said
Mark Stewart,
vice president of Lockheed Martin's Navigation
Systems mission area.
GPS III is a
critically important program for the Air Force,
affordably replacing aging GPS satellites in
orbit, while improving capability to meet the
evolving demands of military, commercial and
civilian users. GPS III satellites will
deliver three times better accuracy; provide up
to eight times improved anti-jamming
capabilities; and include enhancements which
extend spacecraft life 25 percent further than
the prior GPS block. It will be the first
GPS satellite with a new L1C civil signal
designed to make it interoperable with other
international global navigation satellite
systems.
The GPS III team is
led by the
Global Positioning Systems Directorate at
the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems
Center. Lockheed Martin is the GPS III prime
contractor with teammates Exelis, General
Dynamics, Infinity Systems Engineering,
Honeywell, ATK and other subcontractors.
Air Force Space Command's 2nd Space Operations
Squadron (2SOPS), based at Schriever Air
Force Base, Colo., manages and operates the GPS
constellation for both civil and military users.