Booz Allen Hamilton has won a potential three-year, $209.9 million task order from the U.S. Air Force to provide technical engineering support to facilitate command and control, communications, computer, cybersecurity, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems and missions.

To learn more about the latest advances in defense capabilities and gain insights into tech trends in the air and space domains, listen to notable experts at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2025 Air and Space Summit on July 31.
The Department of Defense said Wednesday the Air Force Research Laboratory conducted a competitive acquisition process and received three offers for the Nimbus task order.
Work will occur in McLean, Virginia, through May 14, 2028.
The service branch will fund the cost-plus-fixed-fee task order using research, development, test and evaluation, operation and maintenance, aircraft and other appropriations funds for fiscal year 2025.
What Is the Purpose of AFRL’s Nimbus Task Order?
According to a sources sought notice published in October, Nimbus covers systems engineering services, such as logical analysis; requirements development; solution design; information assurance, or IA, and test documentation implementation; integration; verification/validation of IA and security architecture; and certification/accreditation support for DOD major deployment systems.
Under the task order, the vendor will develop, engineer, integrate, test, transition and sustain systems into operational environments.
Major service efforts covered by the task order include incorporating emerging sensors into the Intelligence Community; supporting global processing, exploitation and dissemination architecture; intelligence IT systems analysis; configuration and database management; cybersecurity services; managing integration between IC members and DOD C2 mision partners; data science and artificial intelligence/machine learning; and Agile methodology.