Washington, Jan
7 (Newswire): Lockheed Martin Corp was awarded up to $4.9 billion in additional
funding for its F-35 Joint Strike Fighter program, the Pentagon announced,
providing a significant end-of-year boost in orders for the largest U.S. defense
contractor.
The U.S. Defense Department said it had reached agreement
with Lockheed on a preliminary contract valued at up to $3.68 billion for 31
F-35s in a sixth batch of planes to be built for the U.S. military, with details
to be finalized the coming year.
It also awarded Lockheed additional
separate contracts valued at up to $1.2 billion for spare parts and sustainment
of the new radar-evading warplane.
The Pentagon plans to spend $396
billion to buy a total of 2,443 F-35 fighter jets from Lockheed over the next
decades for the U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps, making the Joint Strike
Fighter the costliest weapons program in U.S. history.
Lockheed is
developing the single-seat, single-engine plane for the U.S. military and eight
international partners -- Britain, Australia, Italy, Canada, Turkey, Denmark,
Norway and the Netherlands, which helped pay for the plane's
development.
The production contract announced includes 18 conventional
takeoff and landing jets for the Air Force, six short takeoff and landing
variants for the Marine Corps; and seven carrier variants for the
Navy.
It does not include three F-35 fighters to be purchased by Italy
and two to be purchased by Australia as part of the sixth lot of low-rate,
initial production.
Those agreements will be negotiated next year, said
Joe DellaVedova, spokesman for the Pentagon's F-35 program office.
He
said an agreement reached earlier this month on a fifth batch of jets had helped
speed up negotiations on the preliminary sixth production contract.
"The
F-35 Joint Program Office continues to work diligently to ensure that managing
jet cost, remaining on schedule during test and production and driving
production efficiencies ... are incentivized in contract negotiations while
ensuring that respectable profit is available to the contractor," he
said.
He said the Pentagon continued to push the company to reduce its
"rework" rate, which refers to production work that has to be redone because of
mistakes, and also the amount of time needed to make any required changes to the
plane's design.
Lockheed welcomed the agreement with the Defense
Department.
"We remain committed to reducing costs while building upon
our excellent production performance in 2012," said spokesman Mike Rein. "Our
top priority remains to deliver the F-35's 5th generation capability to our U.S.
and partner nations."
The agreement also does not include engines for the
fighters, which are purchased under separate contracts negotiated directly
between the Pentagon and engine maker Pratt & Whitney, a unit of United
Technologies Corp.
Sources familiar with the government's talks with
Pratt & Whitney said they were making good progress.
The Defense
Department two weeks ago finalized an agreement with Lockheed for a fifth batch
of F-35 planes, a $3.8 billion deal to buy 32 of the aircraft.
At the
time, company executives and defense officials said that agreement paved the way
for a deal on early funding for the next group of planes by the end of the
year.
The agreement obligates a significant portion of the funding for
that next group of F-35s, safeguarding that money from cuts, even if U.S.
lawmakers do not reach a deal to avert automatic reductions due to start taking
effect on January 2.
The agreement also removes a potential $1.1 billion
liability that Lockheed said it faced on the program for work done by it and its
key suppliers without a signed contract.
Lockheed shares closed $1.49, or
1.6 percent, lower at $91.34 on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Lockheed gets up to $4.9 billion in further F-35 funding
Lockheed gets up to $4.9 billion in further F-35 funding
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