Raytheon awarded $103 million FAA contract
to provide enhanced GPS air navigation
April 21, 2015
Thanks to a newly awarded $103 million
Federal Aviation Administration contract, Raytheon Company (NYSE:
RTN) will field the newest element in a space-based system which
makes air travel safer and more efficient for millions of travelers.
The Raytheon-supplied system will be a key feature of the FAA's
Wide Area Augmentation System (WAAS) which improves the availability
and accuracy of Global Positioning System (GPS) signals to enable
use by commercial and general aviation aircraft. The company will
develop a payload to be incorporated into a new geostationary (GEO)
satellite and two associated ground uplink stations to support the
WAAS system within U.S. airspace.
"The WAAS system is a critical component to ensuring our national
airspace remains safe, especially with the increased volume of air
traffic," said Michael Espinola,
managing director, Raytheon Air Traffic Systems. "Raytheon's 18
years of collaboration with the FAA continues to deliver accurate,
high-integrity GPS navigation technologies to all pilots within the
national airspace."
WAAS significantly improves GPS accuracy from 100 meters to about
two meters. The system enables more direct flight routing, precision
landing approaches and even access to unimproved airports and remote
landing sites without dependence on ground based infrastructure.
Like its predecessors, the WAAS GEO 6 payload will be hosted
aboard a commercial host satellite in a geostationary earth orbit
(GEO). The GEO payload receives processed signals from the GEO 6
ground stations and then re-broadcasts them to user aircraft. The
FAA operates three WAAS GEO satellite payloads at all times to
ensure continuous system availability. The GEO 6 system, along with
GEO 5 (awarded to Raytheon in 2012), will replace two WAAS GEO
payloads that are approaching the end of their service leases.
It is expected that the WAAS GEO 6 payload will be launched in
the second quarter of 2017. The system will enter its 10-year
operational phase in 2019.
As the original developer of the WAAS system, Raytheon has more
than 60 years of experience in providing global air traffic
management (ATM) technology, including precision satellite-based
navigation products. Raytheon delivers numerous ATM products and
services to civil and military customers around the world.
Raytheon's ATM solutions operate in more than 60 countries, and
monitor more than 60 percent of the world's airspace.