Aerospace Daily & Defense Report

Staff
S-92 SALE: In 2009 Sikorsky will begin delivering 12 S-92 helicopters recently ordered by CHC Helicopter Corp. for offshore transportation requirements and possibly commercial search and rescue (SAR) operations. CHC is under contract to supply aircraft to the U.K.'s Maritime and Coastguard Agency from 2007 to 2012. Sikorsky is offering an S-92 variant for the U.S. Air Force's hotly contested Combat, Search and Rescue-X (CSAR-X) procurement.

Neelam Mathews
Expanding in the Asia Pacific market, Embraer has signed contracts with the Royal Thai Army and the Royal Thai Navy for two ERJ-135 LR (Long-Range) jets. Both agreements include a logistics package, Embraer's Defense and Government business said in a statement. The new ERJ-135 jets will be used for government transportation by both Thai services, as well as for medical evacuation missions by the Royal Thai Navy.

Staff
UNDERWATER AWARD: General Dynamics Electric Boat is on its way to a potentially $890 million award - if fully exercised - to continue Virginia-class submarine lead-yard services and related engineering efforts for the U.S. Navy, the company said Nov. 5. A recent contract modification worth $148 million runs through September 2009. Electric Boat will maintain, update and support design drawings and data for each sub during the construction and post-shakedown availability period.

Staff
The U.S. District Court of Massachusetts has granted iRobot a preliminary injunction against competitor Robotic FX prohibiting its use of certain features of a track design iRobot says originated with its PackBot. Earlier this year iRobot filed a theft of trade secrets lawsuit against Robotic FX, which was founded by former iRobot employee Jameel Ahed. The suit alleges Ahed stole the secrets before he left and used them to create his own company's Negotiator robot.

Michael Bruno
House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey (D-Wis.) has decried "contrived posturing" by the Bush administration over a growing spending showdown but is showing little willingness to capitulate to President Bush's demands over his fiscal 2008 budget requests.

By Joe Anselmo
ITT Corp. may have to up its $1.7 billion bid for EDO Corp. to win shareholder approval of its proposed acquisition of the 82-year-old defense electronics supplier. SAC Capital Advisors, which owns about 6 percent of EDO's outstanding shares, said in a Securities and Exchange Commission filing late last week that ITT's $56 a share offer "may be inadequate." EDO has scheduled a special shareholder meeting for Dec. 18 to ratify the acquisition.

Michael Fabey
As the U.S. Air Force puts together its long-term funding plans, long-lead items in the fiscal year 2009 budget are a must if the service wants to execute its unstated but well-understood plans to get more than 183 Raptors. But sources say the Pentagon is looking to shoot down any attempts to build more F-22s. The Raptor number has always been a flash point for Air Force and Pentagon acquisition officials. The service wanted 750 at first, but as costs rose the Pentagon and lawmakers cut into the number. Compromise

Staff
ACQUIRED: Parker Aerospace, an operating segment of Parker Hannifin Corp., has acquired Shaw Aero Devices, a Naples, Fla.-based producer of fuel system components, hydraulic system equipment and other hardware for military and commercial aircraft. Founded in 1956, Aero Devices has 250 employees and annual sales of $45 million. It will be integrated into Parker Aerospace's Air & Fuel Division. Terms of the purchase were not disclosed.

Frank Morring Jr
The International Space Station (ISS) is ready to provide power to Europe's Columbus laboratory module, thanks to some spectacular space surgery on its torn solar array. But it will be a race against the clock to get the station ready for the shuttle Atlantis to dock with Columbus before the final launch window of the year slams shut.

David Axe
A team comprising Carnegie Mellon, General Motors and Caterpillar took the $2 million first prize Nov. 3 at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency's (DARPA) third robot race since 2004. Urban Challenge required fully autonomous cars and trucks to navigate a 60-mile course at the former George Air Force Base near Victorville, Calif. The course included intersections, traffic circles and parking lots, as well as a couple dozen human-driven cars simulating traffic. Replacing drivers

Neelam Mathews
EADS India is opening a Sourcing Office in India that will identify sourcing opportunities for EADS Business units in the country. The move comes as India's pending defense procurement projects pile up with vendors expecting major announcements in the near future that will require 30 percent offsets. Harvansh Batra will head the new office. EADS also will sponsor, along with the Supply Chain Management Institute of the European Business School, a Chair for Sourcing and Supply Chain Management at the Indian Institute of Management in Bangalore.

Staff
A new Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) report finds that over the next two decades, space-based ballistic missile defenses are likely to prove expensive and -- especially in the case of laser weapons -- technologically risky and relatively easy for an opponent to defeat. The report comes as lawmakers and defense officials debate space-based weapons in light of the U.S. military's dependence on satellites, cost and program issues, and other nations' efforts to counter them (DAILY, Oct. 4).

Staff
AEGIS TEST: The U.S. Missile Defense Agency (MDA) is planning a test for early this week of the Aegis sea-based missile defense system. The test will feature two short-range ballistic missile (SRBM) targets launched nearly simultaneously. The USS Lake Erie will provide the primary sensor and dispatch two Raytheon SM-3 Block 1A interceptors for the hit-to-kill demonstration.

Staff
POLISH AIRLIFT: The Polish air force has acquired two more EADS Casa C-295 military transports, bringing the country's C-295 fleet to 12 aircraft. The new units will be delivered in 2008. Poland had previously ordered eight aircraft in 2001 and another two last year. The two units purchased in 2006 were received this summer. Casa has now sold 60 C-295s, 39 of which have been delivered. Six nations in addition to Poland operate the aircraft.

Staff
MORE COMPETITION: U.S. Army Brig. Gen. Stephen Mundt says he's supportive of acting Pentagon acquisition chief John Young's initiative to fund multiple designs during major development efforts, though he acknowledges that will create funding questions. Specifically, Mundt says the Army selected a winning design for the Joint Tactical Radio System, a software programmable radio effort led by Boeing, too early, and that contributed to technical challenges that have rippled throughout the massive effort and added cost.

Staff
BRITISH WAIVER: The Pentagon's acquisition chief is waiving Buy American restrictions for certain defense items made in the United Kingdom, according to the Federal Register. The move further will permit their procurement unless otherwise restricted by law, such as Section 8015 of the fiscal 2007 defense appropriations act. The domestic preference requirements can be waived if their enforcement impinges on an ally with whom the United States has an acquisition arrangement and the ally does not discriminate against U.S. goods more than the United States does likewise.

Staff
SBIR PROMO: Democratic Sens. John Kerry (Mass.) and Tom Harkin (Iowa) are urging defense appropriators to include an additional $100 million in funding for the Defense Department's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. The House version of the fiscal 2008 defense spending bill included the funding to increase the use of small, high-tech businesses to help the military develop the best technologies, diversify the supply base and reduce costs, according to the senators. Kerry, Harkin and Sen.

Staff
GREAT EXPECTATIONS: Claire Grandy, director of contracting and procurement for the U.S. Coast Guard, is vowing to clearly define expectations on future projects "to ensure we get the best possible performance from a cost and schedule perspective." Grandy says that in the past, "broad statements of objectives weren't always clear. We've moved away from [that] to more detailed specifications for what we require." She cites the National Security Cutter (NSC) as an example of the Coast Guard taking "a step back" to re-evaluate the process.

CSBA

Staff
DWINDLING EURO: "Defense spending continues to be a relative afterthought throughout European capitals, despite the increased demands placed on Europe's militaries to participate in out-of-theater operations under multiple banners," according to Forecast International. The consultancy says limited defense finances of European states could be drained by NATO and European Union defense structures and analysts doubt that a recent mushrooming of missions is sustainable.

Staff
GET ORGANIZED: Washington would be unwise to discard or significantly alter major network-centric warfare (NCW) programs like the U.S. Army's Future Combat Systems or the Air Force's F-22 until the military community gets a better grasp on a new leading concept of operations now NCW has lost its fervor, a conservative think tank analyst warns. But they need a new theory soon, before lawmakers and taxpayers demand and make changes of their own, says Frederick Kagan of the American Enterprise Institute.