Author: Jane Edwards|| Date Published: June 14, 2021
The U.S. Navy has awarded 29 companies potential 10-year contracts worth up to $242 million combined to provide expeditionary supplies and services in support of military exercises, disaster relief, humanitarian missions and contingencies worldwide.
The fleet logistics center of Naval Supply Systems Command in Japan received 35 offers for the indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contracts, which have a five-year base term and a five-year option, the Department of Defense said Friday.
The performance period will kick off this July and could run through June 2031 should the service exercise all options. Work will occur in 22 geographic regions, including North America, Middle East, South America, Western and Eastern Europe, Central America and Southeastern Asia.
The IDIQ contracts have a combined base ceiling value of $121 million and the Navy will obligate $14,500 in operations and maintenance funds for fiscal 2021 to fund the contracts’ minimum amounts.
The Department of State has awarded spots on a multiple-award indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract with a combined potential value of $10 billion…
Brian Hobbs has been appointed CEO of Clarity Innovations, effective March 2, the company announced Tuesday. He succeeds founder and long-serving CEO Wes…
The Federal Aviation Administration has awarded a potential five-year, $437.4 million contract to ASRC Federal Advanced Research to provide second-level…