U.S. Air
Force Awards Lockheed Martin Contract For Next Two SBIRS
Missile Defense Early Warning Satellites
June 24, 2014
The U.S. Air Force awarded
Lockheed Martin a $1.86 billion
fixed-price contract to complete the production of the fifth
and sixth Geosynchronous Earth Orbit (GEO) satellites, known
as GEO-5 and GEO-6, for the Space Based Infrared System
(SBIRS). SBIRS provides our nation continuous early warning
of ballistic missile launches and other tactical
intelligence.
The Air Force awarded initial
funding for the two satellites in a 2012 contract to
complete non-recurring engineering activities and to procure
select long lead parts. In 2013, the service awarded the
advance procurement contract to secure additional long lead
parts.
"SBIRS provides capabilities
critical to our nation's defense but we also understand in
today's environment that we need to find that perfect
balance between capability and affordability," said
Jeffrey Smith, vice
president of Lockheed Martin's Overhead Persistent Infrared
mission area. "This contract is the third part of a
thoughtful acquisition strategy aimed at further reducing
cost and cycle time for GEO-5 and GEO-6, while still
providing exceptional data to the warfighter."
The SBIRS architecture includes a
resilient mix of satellites in GEO, hosted payloads in
Highly Elliptical Orbit (HEO), and ground hardware and
software. The GEO-1 and GEO-2 satellites both received Air
Force Space Command Operational Acceptance in 2013, and have
performance that matches, and in some cases exceeds,
requirements. On schedule for delivery at the end of 2014,
GEO-3 currently is undergoing acoustic and thermal vacuum
testing at Lockheed Martin's
Sunnyvale, California satellite manufacturing
facility. GEO-4 recently entered final assembly, integration
and test.
The SBIRS program delivers timely,
reliable and accurate missile warning and infrared
surveillance information to the President of
the United States, the Secretary of Defense,
combatant commanders, the intelligence community and other
key decision makers. The system enhances global missile
launch detection capability, supports the nation's ballistic
missile defense system, expands the country's technical
intelligence gathering capacity and bolsters situational
awareness for warfighters on the battlefield.