- NASA has begun issuing awards under the latest SEWP VI governmentwide IT procurement program
- SEWP VI provides federal agencies with access to commercial technology products and services
- The contract vehicle covers a broad range of offerings, including cloud, cybersecurity, software, hardware and engineering support
NASA is advancing SEWP VI, the sixth iteration of its Solutions for Enterprise-Wide Procurement governmentwide acquisition contract vehicle, with the selection of an initial pool of 2,115 awardees, the agency said Monday.
Which Capabilities Does SEWP VI Provide?
SEWP VI is an acquisition vehicle for IT products and services designed to give federal agencies access to a broad range of commercial offerings, including hardware, software, cloud services, cybersecurity technologies, engineering support and consulting services. The vehicle also covers data-intensive mission support capabilities.
The competitive procurement was divided into three segments: Category A for IT Solutions, Category B for Enterprise-wide IT Service Solutions and Category C for IT Mission-Based Services. Category C had the largest number of awardees with 1,059 vendors, followed by Category B with 692 awardees and category A with 364.
Who Received SEWP VI Awards?
NASA selected an initial pool of 2,115 awardees, including:
- Agile Defense
- AT&T Enterprises
- Booz Allen Hamilton
- CACI International
- Carahsoft Technology
- CGI Federal
- Chenega Mission Products
- ECS Federal
- Hewlett Packard Enterprise
- HII Mission Technologies
- IBM
- ITC Federal
- Leidos
- NTT Data
- Oceus Networks
- Parsons Government Services
- Peraton
- Sev1Tech
- Siemens Government Technologies
- True Zero Technologies
- Venatore
- Vertosoft
What Are the Contract Terms?
SEWP VI contracts are structured as indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity awards and support multiple task-order pricing arrangements, including firm-fixed-price, labor-hour and time-and-materials orders.
The contracts have a 10-year ordering period running from Nov. 1 through Oct. 31, 2036. Each award carries a maximum value of $20 billion.














