Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Robert Wall, Amy Svitak
PARIS — Eurocopter has begun discussions with the German government regarding planned defense spending cuts that likely will see procurement reduced to 55-70 units. Initial discussions are also due to begin this week with Spain’s new government to determine what cuts may loom there. Although more paring is all but inevitable, Eurocopter President and CEO Lutz Bertling says their scale is not clear. In Germany, for instance, the number of Tigers to be acquired is likely to be higher than the 40 units discussed.

Robert Wall, Amy Svitak
PARIS — Eurocopter expects helicopter deliveries to enter a new growth phase in 2012, with order intake anticipated to rise for a second year. “Our assumption is very strong growth in the next years,” CEO Lutz Bertling says. Deliveries are expected to return to their pre-crisis level, or about 600, up from 503 units last year, 527 in 2010 and 558 in 2009. Order intake this year should surpass 500 units, Bertling believes.

Staff
A Jan. 24 DAILY story misidentified the EELV engine being offered at a discount to United Launch Alliance. It is the RS-68 engine, which powers the core stage of the Delta IV.

Mark Carreau
HOUSTON — The crew of the International Space Station joined with launch teams in Kazakhstan early this week for a series of preparations leading to the late Jan. 27 arrival of Russia’s first Progress resupply mission of 2012. The unpiloted space freighter, loaded with nearly three tons of dry goods, research gear, propellant, water and compressed air, is scheduled for launch from the Baikonur Cosmodrome on Jan. 25 at 6:06 p.m. EST, or Jan. 26 at 5:06 a.m. at the desert launch site.
Space

Frank Morring, Jr.
NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility, long a center for sounding rocket science campaigns, is becoming a site for small satellite launches as well, according to NASA’s new chief technologist. Mason Peck, a Cornell professor who assumed a two-year assignment managing NASA’s open-ended technology-development effort Jan. 3, toured the venerable launch site on Virginia’s eastern shore Jan. 24, and found it a promising spot for smallsat work.
Space

By Guy Norris
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — While U.S. launch officials slowly make headway in their efforts to curb rising launch costs, some are calling for a better compromise between mission assurance and affordability as the Air Force studies a possible rate increase to 10 national security space launches per year.

Amy Butler
The U.S. Air Force is embarking on an accelerated analysis of alternatives for a future defense weather satellite constellation after initiating the termination of Northrop Grumman’s Defense Weather Satellite System (DWSS) contract.

By Jen DiMascio
The leaders of the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) are scheduled to dine with Defense Secretary Leon Panetta Jan. 25 at the Pentagon to discuss the broad outlines of looming defense budget reductions. Their briefing will come one day before the press anticipates a similar readout, as the military considers how to approach a $489 billion reduction to its prior spending plans for the next decade.
Defense

Staff
Feb. 14-16, 2012 Arlington, VA Shedding light on DoD’s future spending priorities and important technology areas! Hear from senior service leaders on what the customer wants and how requirements are shifting. For more information and to register visit www.aviationweek.com/events/dtar. Click here to view the pdf

Robert Wall
LONDON — After some delay, Oman’s long-anticipated purchase of Eurofighter Typhoons has taken an important step forward. The Omani government has now submitted a request for proposals to BAE Systems for both procurement and, importantly, support of the strike fighter. The initial deal is expected to be for around 12 aircraft. Contract award is expected later in the year, with delivery likely to come 36 months later.
Defense

Andy Savoie
ARMY General Atomics Aeronautical Systems Inc., Poway, Calif., was awarded a $30,342,272 cost-plus-incentive-fee contract. The award will provide for the modification of an existing contract in support of the MQ-1C Gray Eagle unmanned aircraft system quick reaction capability. The work will be performed in Poway, Calif., with an estimated completion date of May 7, 2012. One bid was solicited, with one bid received. The U.S. Army Contracting Command, Redstone Arsenal, Ala., is the contracting activity (W58RGZ-09-C-0153).
Defense

Michael Mecham
A solar flare that erupted Jan. 22 has prompted the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to issue warnings of a geomagnetic storm that will wash over Earth on the morning of Jan. 24, potentially upsetting power grids, navigation and satellites. For spacecraft, geostationary satellites are most at risk because their orbits at 22,300 mi. above the equator put them beyond the protection of the planet’s radiation belts. Satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO) generally operate within the radiation belts.
Space

Andy Savoie
Selected aerospace and defense contracts for the week of Jan. 17-20, 2012. ARMY
Defense

Graham Warwick
AAI Corp. is proposing a new vertical-takeoff-and-landing (VTOL) design for the U.S. Navy’s medium-range maritime unmanned aerial system (MRMUAS) requirement. The Shadow Knight is based on the slowed-rotor/compound (SR/C) concept licensed from Carter Aviation Technologies, but with changes to enable a true hover capability for operation from ships.
Defense

Andy Savoie
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Defense

By Jen DiMascio
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Defense

Paul McLeary
The Pentagon’s Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Organization (Jieddo) is looking for industry solutions to the problem of homemade explosives (HME) — specifically those made with ammonium nitrate fertilizer, which has become the deadliest weapon used against NATO troops in Afghanistan. According to a Broad Area Announcement issued Jan. 17, Jieddo is looking for studies that will “define the signatures and available observables” for these explosives, as well as “aid in the development of capabilities to counter these threats.”
Defense

By Jen DiMascio
President Barack Obama’s budget release will be delayed a week until Feb. 13, an administration official confirms. “The date was determined based on the need to finalize decisions and technical details of the document,” the official said in an email, adding that in keeping with efforts to rein in the federal deficit, the administration will not distribute paper copies of the budget. The administration is supposed to submit its budget to Congress on the first Monday of February. The Obama administration has met that deadline just once — in 2010.

Robert Wall
LONDON — In another indication that the maritime surveillance market is remaining robust even as defense spending comes under pressure, a group of companies — Indra, Selex Galileo, FLIR Systems, Airborne Technologies and Tecnam — has unveiled a new maritime surveillance venture. The program is built on Tecnam’s light twin-engine P2006T and should be ready for entry into service by year’s end, Indra says in a statement announcing the effort.
Defense

Frank Morring, Jr.
Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne (PWR) has sent an unsolicited proposal to United Launch Alliance (ULA) that would cut the price of RL10 rocket engines by 25%, and by almost half from the levels reached in summer 2010.

Robert Wall
LONDON — South Korea has formally launched its F-X fighter competition, with the goal of having bids in hand on June 18.
Defense

By Joe Anselmo
Michael McCord, the U.S. Defense Department’s comptroller, warns of dire consequences if more than $1 trillion in approved cuts to military spending over 10 years are allowed to take effect. The result would be the lowest number of ships since World War I, the smallest ground force since 1940 and the smallest Air Force ever, he recently told investors.
Defense

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) is due to release a report Jan. 24 that analyzes the U.S. Navy’s decision to restart the Arleigh Burke-class destroyer production line. GAO is seeking to determine the underlying basis for the Navy’s decision to select the DDG-51 as the “best hullform” for future surface combatants. Requested by the House Appropriations defense subcommittee, GAO’s report and congressional reaction to it could force the Navy to revise its strategy for destroyers and combat systems.
Defense

By Bradley Perrett
BEIJING — The Royal Australian Navy, moving ahead with the general installation of an anti-ship missile defense (ASMD) upgrade, plans to hand over an Anzac-class frigate for enhancement by BAE Systems in September. Seven ships will be heavily modified in the program, whose key feature is a CEA Technologies radar suite with active, electronically scanned arrays. The eighth member of the class, HMAS Perth, already has the system and proved its effectiveness in trials last year.
Defense