Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: April 21, 2022
A Raytheon Technologies (NYSE: RTX) business has secured a potential five-year, $1.68 billion contract from the U.S. Navy to provide modernization, activation and sustainment support for Total Ship Computing Environment infrastructure and mission systems of Zumwalt-class guided missile destroyers.
Raytheon Missiles & Defense will also provide non-recurring engineering support to facilitate combat system installation, testing, integration, development, correction, modernization and maintenance of mission systems of DDG 1000 Zumwalt-class ships under the cost-plus-incentive-fee contract, the Department of Defense said Wednesday.
The contract has a one-year base period valued at approximately $482.7 million.
Work will occur in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, California, New Hampshire, Mississippi and Indiana and could run through April 2027 if all options are exercised.
Wes Kremer, president of Raytheon Missiles & Defense, said the contract highlights the company’s role as a systems integrator and efforts to provide cyber protection, software development and upgrades and other support services to the Navy’s Zumwalt ships.
Sally Wallace has been promoted to executive vice president and chief operating officer at Leonardo DRS. The Arlington, Virginia-based company said Tuesday…
IT systems integrator 22nd Century Technologies, Inc. has completed its acquisition of BT Federal, the U.S. government contracting arm of BT Group. Government…
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency has awarded Raytheon a five-year, $110.4 million contract to support the Geospatial-Intelligence Data Transformation Service IV…
The U.S. Air Force has awarded InDyne a potential $1.1 billion indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract to support the service’s missile warning and…