Bernie Gruber, USAF:
Lockheed Martin Selected for $238M Third and Fourth GPS III Satellites
Contract
January 16, 2012
The U.S. Air Force
has awarded Lockheed Martin a $238 million contract for production of
the third and fourth satellites in the next-generation Global
Positioning System (GPS) constellation, known as GPS III. The
acquisition of the next two GPS III satellites at one time will allow
the Lockheed Martin-led team to maximize efficiencies in satellite
manufacturing.
GPS
III
The GPS III program will affordably replace aging GPS satellites while
improving capability to meet the evolving needs of military, commercial
and civilian users worldwide. GPS III satellites will deliver better
accuracy and improved anti-jamming power while enhancing the
spacecraft’s design life and adding a new civil signal designed to be
interoperable with international global navigation satellite systems.
"GPS is a global gold standard, providing accurate, reliable,
continuous, free worldwide positioning, navigation and timing (PNT)
services," said Col Bernie Gruber, director of the U.S. Air Force's
Global Positioning Systems Directorate. "And we are focused on
delivering world-class space-based PNT capabilities to our users around
the world. As the need for more capability increases, GPS III will allow
us to affordably sustain and modernize the constellation by providing
increased capabilities incrementally to better meet current and future
needs."
In May 2008, the Air Force awarded Lockheed Martin an initial contract
to design, develop and build the first two GPS III satellites. The
contract also includes options for up to 10 additional spacecraft. With
the most recent award, the GPS III team is now on contract to deliver
four GPS III space vehicles, with the first launch scheduled in 2014.
The Air Force has plans to build up to 32 GPS III satellites.
“The government has mapped an extremely sensible acquisition strategy
for GPS III and we are focusing on executing the program to deliver
these much needed capabilities to billions of users around the word,”
said Mark Valerio, vice president and general manager of Lockheed
Martin’s Surveillance and Navigation Systems line of business. “As we
produce more GPS III satellites, we aim to continually reduce the cost
and cycle time of each space vehicle to ensure we deliver the greatest
value to the Air Force.”
The
GPS III program continues to achieve major milestones and the first
space vehicle is progressing on schedule. Lockheed Martin received the
core structure for the first GPS III satellite at its Stennis, Miss.,
facility in August, and is now integrating the space vehicle’s flight
propulsion subsystem. The integrated core propulsion module will be
shipped to Lockheed Martin’s GPS Processing Facility (GPF) in the summer
of 2012 and will then undergo final assembly, integration and test in
order to meet its planned 2014 launch.
For GPS III, Lockheed Martin is building on its proven record of
delivering highly reliable GPS spacecraft. The fleet of Lockheed
Martin-built GPS IIR and IIR-M satellites makes up the majority of the
operational GPS constellation. The satellites have exceeded 140
cumulative operational years on-orbit with a reliability record of
better than 99.9 percent. Lockheed Martin heritage programs date back to
the production of the Oscar and Nova satellites, the programs that paved
the way to the current GPS system.
The GPS III team is led by the Global Positioning Systems Directorate at
the U.S. Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center. Lockheed Martin is
the GPS III prime contractor with teammates ITT Exelis, General
Dynamics, Infinity Systems Engineering, Honeywell, ATK and other
subcontractors. Air Force Space Command's 2nd Space Operations Squadron
(2SOPS), based at Schriever Air Force Base, Colo., manages and operates
the GPS constellation for both civil and military users.