Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Michael Bruno
The U.S. Army is working on a 30-year research, development and acquisition “road map” to determine what science and technology efforts it needs to invest in now, according to top Army leaders. Force protection, from ground and airborne threats to individual soldiers and large Army bases around the world, will be a “paramount” focus, said Heidi Shyu, assistant secretary of the Army for acquisition, logistics and technology, at the annual Association of the U.S. Army conference in Washington last week.
Defense

CRS
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Defense

Staff
U.S. AIR FORCE L-3 Communications Vertex Aerospace L.L.C., Madison, Miss., (FA3002-13-C-0006) is being awarded a $34,689,207 firm fixed price contract for acquisition of aircraft maintenance support services for T-1A, T-6A, T-38C SUPT and T-38C IFF. The location of the performance is Columbus Air Force Base, Miss. Work is expected to be completed by Sept. 29, 2019. The contracting activity is AETC CONS/LGCK, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas.
Defense

Staff
NOTE TO READERS: While the Aerospace DAILY team will make every effort to continue providing our readers with industry-leading news during Hurricane Sandy, production of the newsletter may be adversely affected in the coming days. In that event, subscribers to the Aviation Week Intelligence Network still will be able to access updates at www.aviationweek.com/awin.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Navy says it successfully fired six Rafael Spike missiles from an unmanned surface vessel (USV) recently, the first time the service proved it could fire such weapons from a USV. The Expeditionary Warfare Division and Naval Sea Systems Command’s (Navsea) Naval Special Warfare Program Office conducted the launches Oct. 24 from a USV precision engagement module (PEM), a remotely operated, 11-meter boat armed with missiles and a .50-caliber machine gun.
Defense

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — NASA says operations aboard the International Space Station should not be affected if the SpaceX CRS-2 cargo delivery mission currently slated for January slips as a result of the ongoing investigation into the first-stage engine loss that occurred on the Oct. 7 CRS-1 mission. The supply cache delivered to the station in early to mid-2011 by the now-retired space shuttle placed the six-person orbiting science lab on a firm footing well into 2013, according to Mike Suffredini, NASA’s space station program manager.
Space

Graham Warwick
A new U.S. National Research Council (NRC) report warns that scaling up production of biofuels from algae to meet just 5% of U.S. transportation fuel needs would place unsustainable demands on energy, water and nutrients. But algal biofuel supporters have welcomed the report, which also concludes that sustainability concerns “are not a definitive barrier for future production” and that further R&D “could help realize algal biofuels’ full potential.”

Staff
U.S. Air Force
Defense

Staff
U.S. NAVY
Defense

Amy Butler
Saab is hoping that its Rigs head-up-display will gain interest from the U.S. Army as the company pushes to boost sales in the U.S. Though the U.S. defense market is under pressure from budget cuts, the company still sees opportunity here, says John Belanger, head of communications for the Swedish company’s North America operation. “U.S. defense is still roughly 50% of the total global budget,” he says. About 80% of Saab’s business is exported from Sweden.
Defense

AWIN, DOD, House and Senate Reports
Click here to view the pdf 2013 U.S. Defense Spending: Current Funding Outlook: Air Force RDT&E Lines where 2013 Request differs from 2012 Enacted Amount by more than 20%($ in thousands) 2013 U.S.
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr.
Orbital Technologies Corp. (Orbitec), a Madison, Wisc.-based space-technology company, has flight tested a version of the 30,000-lb.-thrust liquid-propellant rocket engine it is developing for the U.S. Air Force’s Advanced Upper Stage Engine Program (Ausep) and other in-space applications.

Amy Svitak
SASSENAGE, France — A Franco-German accord as to how the European Space Agency (ESA) will pay its portion of common operating costs associated with the International Space Station (ISS) in 2017-20 could founder under a roughly €480 million ($650 million) shortfall in ESA’s €4 billion budget for the orbiting outpost through the end of the decade.
Space

Amy Svitak
SASSENAGE, France — With less than a month before European Space Agency (ESA) ministers meet to set the agency’s multiyear spending plan, a Franco-German compromise is emerging in the debate over the future of European launchers.
Space

Staff
To list an event, send information in calendar format to Donna Thomas at [email protected]. (Bold type indicates new calendar listing.) Oct. 30 - Nov. 1 — 15th Biennial Helicopter Military Operations Technology Specialists' Meeting, Crowne Plaza Williamsburg, Fort Magaruder, Va. For more information go to www.vtol.org/events/helmot-xv. Oct. 30 - 31 — 2012 Coast Guard Innovation Expo, Virginia Beach Convention Center, Virginia Beach, Va. For more information go to www.ndia.org/exhibits/3230.

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Michael Fabey
Competition for Pentagon work can actually drive up prices, says a recent analysis by the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA). “The way a competition is structured can be a determining factor in whether competitive pressure is sufficient to balance the additional development costs of multiple contractors and the higher unit costs from splitting the award in defense acquisitions,” says CSBA senior fellow Todd Harrison. “In some instances, the structure of the competition can actually incentivize contractors to bid higher and drive up costs.”
Defense

Mark Carreau
The anticipated upswing in domestic use of unmanned aircraft poses a potential threat to U.S. Constitutional privacy rights that federal agencies have been slow to address, according to experts at an Oct. 25 policy forum. The expected increase in UAV flights is being bolstered by national security and environmental interests, local law enforcement, industrial surveillance as well as private owners. Legislation passed in February requires the FAA to integrate drones into the federal airspace by December 2015.

Michael Fabey
As the first DDG-1000 Zumwalt-class destroyer moves close to completion, U.S. Navy interest is rising and the cost of the ship appears to be dropping. In recent blogs and official releases, the Navy brass has continued to tout the benefits of its new, most futuristic warship, with the composite deckhouse making its trek via barge from the Gulf of Mexico to Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine, where the ship is being assembled.
Defense

Michael Mecham
ANOTHER HURDLE: The proposed $1 billion sale of Space Systems/Loral (SS/L) to Canada’s MacDonald, Dettwiler and Associates Ltd. (MDA) has cleared its antitrust review at the U.S. Department of Justice, SSL parent Loral Space & Communications announced Oct. 26. Loral now expects that any further requirements for the deal, “all of which are within the parties’ control, will be satisfied.” The Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States cleared the sale last month. SS/L has said it expects the transaction to close in the fourth quarter.
Space

By Jen DiMascio
Raytheon and General Electric are two leading defense companies among the top contributors to Sen. Scott Brown’s (R-Mass.) re-election race, the most expensive in the U.S. during this election cycle. Brown has raised $24.4 million in this cycle, drawing $77,751 from employees of Raytheon, headquartered in Waltham, Mass., according to the Center for Responsive Politics. Lobbyists representing the company added another $4,000 to Brown’s race against Democrat Elizabeth Warren.
Defense

Amy Butler
The Aegis SM-2 Block IIIA engagement this week against a cruise missile target as part of the U.S. Missile Defense Agency’s (MDA) largest-ever flight trial has been deemed a success by operators, according to MDA officials. Early reports from MDA only listed the SM-2IIIA as having “engaged” the BQM-74E target; agency spokeswoman Pam Rogers would not list it as a success or intercept.
Defense

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — Spacewalking U.S. and Japanese astronauts plan to re-activate an older thermal control system radiator as part of a strategy to circumvent a small but growing ammonia leak on the International Space Station’s oldest solar power truss. The six- to seven-hour outing by NASA’s Sunita Williams, the station’s commander, and Akihiko Hoshide is scheduled for Nov. 1 at 8:15 a.m. EDT and will take the two astronauts to the far port side of the orbiting science lab’s 356-ft.-long solar power truss.
Space

Amy Butler
The U.S. Army and Raytheon are nearing completion of talks on a contract for more technology development on a seeker for the service’s Joint Air-to-Ground Missile (JAGM), according to military and industry officials. The service and company differed in their opinions of readiness for a tri-mode seeker for JAGM, with the Army pushing Raytheon officials to consider a dual-mode design that would omit the imaging infrared capability.
Defense