Raytheon [RTN] was recently awarded a $75 million indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity cost plus award fee contract from NASA Goddard to maintain and manage large volumes of sensing data and imagery from space instruments, the company reported.

The effort will have a $250 million ceiling for the five-year base period of performance, according to the company.

The Earth Observing System Data and Information System (EOSDIS) evolution and development contract will give climate researchers access to valuable data about the earth’s atmospheres, oceans, lands and their interactions, Raytheon said.

“This contract enables Raytheon to continue to build upon our strong legacy of providing program excellence, innovation and reliable engineering solutions to NASA’s earth observing systems,” TW Scott, vice president of Raytheon’s Mission Operations and Solutions, said.

Raytheon developed the core components of EOSDIS, called the EOSDIS core system, which became operational in 1999; it provides data ingest, archive and distribution services at data centers that manage earth observing data. In 2003, Raytheon won the core system maintenance and development contract and has continued its partnership with NASA to maintain and evolve key elements of EOSDIS, the company added.

NASA developed EOSDIS to manage and provide access to data collected by a suite of earth observation satellites. This data is used by a growing international user community that includes earth scientists, educators, federal, state, local and tribal agencies, and the public. The data has many uses, including climate change research, disaster planning and response, natural resource assessment, and understanding the earth as an integrated system, according to Raytheon.