Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
In an effort to gain a foothold in the Operationally Responsive Space (ORS) market, Northrop Grumman and Israeli Aerospace Industries are teaming to offer quick-response surveillance satellites that they say could be delivering capabilities to users 28 months after getting the go-ahead, the companies announced April 11.

Michael Bruno
Federal contracting arbiters have rejected a contract award protest by Northrop Grumman against the U.S. Army Communications-Electronics Command's (CECOM) potentially $1.6 billion award to Lockheed Martin Maritime Systems & Sensors for the Enhanced AN/TPQ-36 (EQ-36) Target Acquisition Counter Fire Radar System. Northrop Grumman challenged CECOM's evaluation of proposals and asserted that Lockheed's proposal failed to satisfy a mandatory solicitation requirement.

Staff
CANADIAN UAVS: Several Canadian defense companies, the Canadian government and academia have formed a national trade organization to promote advancement and use of Canadian expertise in unmanned vehicle systems. The new organization, known as AUVSI-Canada, is affiliated with the Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) and will be headquartered in Ottawa. It will try to establish regional chapters.

Staff
KENNEDY SPACE CENTER - Liftoff of space shuttle mission STS-117 will be delayed to no earlier than June 8-July 18 following a decision by shuttle managers that launch site repairs to the external tank will be safe and that there is greater schedule advantage to using the repaired tank than a pristine new one.

Staff
ANIK F3: An International Launch Services (ILS) Proton Breeze M rocket has orbited the Anik F3 spacecraft for Telesat Canada - its first launch of the year. The C-/Ku-/Ka-band satellite, leased to Echostar and built by EADS Astrium, lifted off at 10:54 p.m. GMT April 9 from ILS's launch pad at Baikonur, Kazakhstan. ILS plans to perform six launches this year, including the first mission with a higher-thrust Phase 2 Enhancement version of Proton in June.

Staff

Michael Fabey
The recently released Pentagon Selected Acquisition Reports (SARs) for the later months of 2006 reveal a marked increase in the cost of high-profile aircraft programs, 10 of which have grown a total of $43 billion, or about 8 percent, according to SAR data. Those 10 programs highlighted in the SARs now total about $578 billion, the data show (see chart p. 5). "The increase is a healthy one," said Richard Aboulafia, vice president of the Teal Group. "But with rising commodity costs and other issues, it's not unexpected."

Staff
OSPREY DEPLOYMENT: Marine Corps Gen. James Conway, the commandant, will announce the deployment of the first operational MV-22 Osprey squadron April 13 at the Pentagon. Lt. Gen. John Castellaw, deputy commandant for aviation, will also speak and then a small group of reporters will fly onboard one.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Air Force's A-10C Thunderbolts should soon be combat operational with upgraded avionics and enhanced weapons capabilities, said Col. James Ratti, 508th Aircraft Sustainment Squadron commander, and A-10 System Program Manager. Ratti said during an April 11 press briefing that he could not divulge where and when the upgraded A-10s would see combat. "You can connect the dots," Ratti said. "You know where they've been flying." The Thunderbolts have been one of the stalwart combat aircraft in Iraq since the war began.

Staff

Michael Fabey
The Pentagon has listed eight programs in its recently released Selected Acquisition Reports (SARs) that breached their Nunn-McCurdy unit cost-growth limits, where the program or average unit costs have increased by 15 percent or more to their current acquisition program baselines (APB) or by 30 percent or more to their original APB.

Michael Bruno
President Bush and congressional Democrats sparred April 10 over the pending supplemental measure for fiscal 2007, with Bush asserting that the military will have to make cuts affecting personnel if supplemental funds don't become available by April 15, while Democrats maintained they are doing what voters asked for in the 2006 elections. Both sides declared their willingness to meet to talk about the supplemental - but without backing down from their positions.

Staff
COST CUTS: Adm. Mike Mullen, the chief of naval operations, says the Navy next year will try to get a better understanding of its contractors with an eye toward cost cutting and better spending. In an April 3 appearance at the Brookings Institution in Washington, he pointed to plans to cut 10,000 sailors annually and intentions to tighten civilian employee ranks as well.

Staff
LAUNCH DELAYED: The launch of Germany's pioneering TerraSAR-X - the first commercial one-meter resolution radar imaging satellite - has been put off once again because of launch manifest problems with the Dnepr-1 booster. The mission, initially set for October 2006 and most recently for late March/early April, will now slip until late May/early June, says German aerospace center DLR. DLR is providing part of the funding for the mission, with the remainder provided by EADS/Infoterra, which will operate and market the spacecraft.

Staff
Northrop Grumman and its KC-30 Tanker Team, including EADS, are "in this competition to win it," the group declared April 10 in announcing that they had submitted their proposal to the U.S. Air Force. More than 300 representatives of Northrop Grumman, EADS, General Electric, Sargent Fletcher, Honeywell and other potential KC-30 tanker suppliers labored longer than two-and-a-half years on the bid, Northrop officials said.

Michael Fabey
The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) remains concerned about the risks of the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter's (JSF) development plan, despite a 2006 blitz of reports and meetings in Washington by prime contractor Lockheed Martin aimed at assuaging such concerns. Comparing the JSF plan to that of Lockheed Martin's F-22 Raptor, GAO again cites concerns over concurrent development and procurement, cost growth and program delays in a recent report on tactical aircraft.

Staff
NATO LAW: President Bush on April 9 signed the NATO Freedom Consolidation Act of 2007, according to the White House. The new law reaffirms U.S. support for continued enlargement of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and designates Albania, Croatia, Georgia, Macedonia and Ukraine as eligible to receive assistance under the NATO Participation Act of 1994. It also authorizes fiscal 2008 appropriations - which have been requested but remain far from finalized by Congress - for military assistance for these countries, the Bush administration said April 10.

Staff
NEW CREW: The Expedition 15 crew arrived onboard the International Space Station April 9. Commander Fyodor Yurchikhin, Flight Engineer Oleg Kotov and Space Tourist Charles Simonyi docked in their Soyuz spacecraft two days after launching from Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. On April 20 Simonyi will return home with Expedition 14 Commander Michael Lopez-Alegria and Flight Engineer Mikhail Tyurin, who have been living in space since last September.

John M. Doyle
COLORADO SPRINGS - Bigelow Aerospace will charge "sovereign customers" - nations that want to send their astronauts into space - $14.95 million to spend four weeks in one of the company's proposed inflatable orbiting modules. That time can be doubled for another $2.95 million. Private companies that want to lease a module for industrial research would be charged $88 million per year for a full 350-cubic meter module, and as little as $4.5 million per month for a half-module.

Michael A. Taverna
Arianespace affiliate Starsem has set the first Soyuz launch of the year for May 22, carrying the first of two Globalstar replenishment payloads. It will be preceded in early May by an Ariane 5 mission, carrying Intelsat's Galaxy 17 and the SES Astra 1L communications satellites.

John M. Doyle
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has repositioned its GOES-10 satellite over South America to help detect severe weather and forest fires sooner in the region, U.S. and Brazilian officials announced April 10.