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posted by janrinok on Tuesday August 09 2016, @12:53AM   Printer-friendly
from the sshhh-don't-tell-anyone dept.

SpaceNews reports that the US Air Force will award United Launch Alliance a contract to build two Delta 4 Heavy rockets for National Reconnaissance Office missions. The award comes without competitive bidding (think SpaceX).

The announcement comes as the Air Force is working to re-introduce competition into the national security launch industry. In April, SpaceX won the first of nine launch contracts the Defense Department intends to put out for bid in the next three years.

But in this case, in a pre-solicitation notice posted to the Federal Business Opportunities website Aug. 4, the Air Force said it opted for a sole-source contract for classified National Reconnaissance Office missions slated to launch in 2020 and 2023. The NRO builds and operates the country's spy satellites.

The Air Force said it chose ULA due to the timing and complexity of the integration of the satellites to the rockets, unique requirements, and the need to have a certified launch vehicle by the award date.

ULA is "currently the only responsible source," the notice said.

Conventional wisdom is that the ULA Delta 4 Heavy rocket is a competitor for SpaceX's Falcon Heavy rocket in these types of launches.

But SpaceX, which sued the Air Force in federal court in 2014 for the right to compete for national security missions, said it understood the Air Force's decision.

"These particular missions had very specific technical requirements," John Taylor, a SpaceX spokesman said in an email to SpaceNews. "We worked closely with the DoD and the USAF on this action and decided jointly it was the right approach."

Based on a previous statement by ULA that a Delta 4 Heavy rocket costs around $350 million (US), it's reasonable to assume that the value of the contract is at least roughly $700 million (US).


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  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday August 09 2016, @01:35AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday August 09 2016, @01:35AM (#385581) Journal

    Of course I'm not a rocket scientist, but my guess is, some technical bit can't be met by SpaceX vehicles - YET. Your final suggestion may be on target though. Government coercion works pretty effectively.

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