Search

Air Force Event To Push For Faster Fielding Of Technology

Air Force Event To Push For Faster Fielding Of Technology
Air Force acquisition chief William Roper (Photo courtesy of Air Force)

The U.S. Air Force plans to hold a service-wide “acquisition day” in late May to review the status of its programs, including how they are doing on cost and what they can do to deploy new technology more quickly.

Air Force acquisition chief William Roper said April 27 that he hopes one portion of the full-day event will focus on expanding the use of technology to improve sustainment, which accounts for much of the service’s spending on weapon systems. 

Air Force acquisition chief William Roper (Photo courtesy of Air Force)
Air Force acquisition chief William Roper (Photo courtesy of Air Force)

“Sustainment has problems,” Roper told reporters at the Pentagon. “We have aircraft on the ground that should be in the air.”

Potential solutions mentioned by Roper include making greater use of artificial intelligence, predictive maintenance and three-dimensional printed parts, and paying more attention to sustainment when designing weapon systems.

“I think there’s a lot we can do here,” he said.

Roper believes rapid delivery of software updates will be key to the continued modernization of the service’s new Lockheed Martin [LMT]-built F-35A Lightning II. To show the fighter jet program can achieve such agile software development, Roper is looking to pursue “pathfinders” in F-35 sustainment areas, such as the autonomic logistics information system (ALIS) or mission data files.

“Most of what we have left to do [on the F-35] is software,” he said. “The department has not historically been good at software development. Across the Air Force, we’ve got to get better at software.”

Air Force officials say the return of great-power competition means that the service must implement technological advances more quickly to maintain its edge in the battlespace.

“You could imagine in a future war, we could be changing software every day of the war as a necessary factor for winning,” Roper said. “We’re going to have to do it because software’s going to be the delineator.”



Contract Updates

BAE Systems Space & Mission Systems Inc. (Boulder, Colorado) – $48,000,000

BAE Systems Space & Mission Systems Inc., Boulder, Colorado, was awarded a $48,000,000 firm-fixed-price contract for the study, design, development, enhancement, testing, and procurement of advanced communication-electronics technologies. Bids were solicited via the internet with one received. Work locations and…


Portus Stevedoring LLC (Jacksonville, Florida) – $8,292,583

Portus Stevedoring LLC, Jacksonville, Florida, is awarded a not-to-exceed $8,292,583 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with a five-year ordering period for stevedoring and related terminal services. This contract provides for full range of stevedoring and related terminal services to include the receipt,…


Foster Miller doing business as QinetiQ North America (Waltham, Massachusetts) – $11,310,230

Foster Miller, doing business as QinetiQ North America, Waltham, Massachusetts, is awarded an $11,310,230 firm-fixed-price modification to a previously awarded indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract (N00174-21-D-0019) to exercise Option Year Four for production, engineering support, and post-production support of the MK 2 Man…


EnergySolutions Services Inc. (Oak Ridge, Tennessee) – $13,336,650

EnergySolutions Services Inc., Oak Ridge, Tennessee, is being awarded a $13,336,650 firm-fixed-price, indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract action (N42158-25-D-E001) for nuclear services for the processing, recycling and disposal of radiologic materials through disassembly, decontamination, metal melting, compaction, incineration, resin sluicing/dewater, bulk waste assay…