GE and Rolls-Royce Propose Fixed Price Offer for JSF Engine
Offer to create and accelerate engine competition & change procurement process
Read Market Research :
The Military Airlift Market 2009-2019
(Evendale, Ohio, April 27, 2010) -- General Electric Co. and Rolls-Royce today announced that they have offered to the Pentagon a fixed price offer on their F136 engine for the Joint Strike Fighter (JSF).The offer intends to create and accelerate competition between the JSF program's two engine suppliers, and to shift the risk of cost overruns from the government to defense contractors.
The offer could change the Government's acquisition model for procuring approximately 150 F136 engines in the early years of the fighter program, allowing the Government to know immediately its costs over this period. Also, the approach is intended to drive lower pricing between the two competing engine suppliers.
With more than 70 percent of its development complete, the GE/Rolls-Royce F136 engine program is poised for flight-testing next year.
"Today, we are announcing a fixed-price offer for F136 engines purchased in 2012, followed by further price reductions for engines procured in each 2013 and 2014," said David Joyce, president and CEO of GE Aviation. "We can create a competitive environment that will save the government $1 billion over the next five years, and $20 billion over the life of the JSF program."
"Funding the F136 engine means buying what's best for the U.S. armed forces and the U.S. taxpayer," said Dan Korte, President - Defence, Rolls-Royce. "It means a vote for choice and a vote against a sole-source monopoly, which will raise prices and choke competition across the sector for generations to come. Competition works, and we are already seeing that in action."
With this offer, GE and Rolls-Royce assume the risk of meeting or beating price targets for early production engines while creating a competitive behaviour to drive lower costs as the learning curve phase of production must be achieved earlier.
In response to cost overruns and schedule delays in major weapon programs, The Weapon Systems Acquisition Reform Act of 2009 was signed into law to mandate competition through the entire life of major defense programs -- including funding competing sources.
The F-35 Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) program creates the perfect opportunity -- a multi-role aircraft replacing numerous tactical fighter aircraft, with potential production for the U.S. Air Force, Navy, Marines and international customers to reach 5,000 to 6,000 aircraft over 30 years. Without competing engines for the fighter, a $100 billion monopoly will be handed to a single supplier.
The JSF engine program will ultimately reach $100 billion. Recently, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) anticipated a 20 percent benefit from a JSF engine competition, using the F-16 engine competition as a comparison. There are also vast benefits beyond sheer cost - related to operational readiness and contractor responsiveness.
The P&W F135 development is estimated to grow 50 percent beyond its original contract, from $4.8 billion to $7.3 billion, according to a recent report from the GAO, adding, "F135 engine development cost increases primarily resulted from higher costs for labor and materials, supplier problems, and the rework needed to correct deficiencies with an engine blade during re-design."
Source : General Electric - click here for more information
International Defense Energy & Fuel Security (IDEFS) 2010
Washington, DC,United States
Nov 8 - 10, 2010
Register |
More info |
Send to friend |
More events
More News from GE Transportation, Aircraft Engines
-
Sep 9, 2010GE Works With GD C4 Systems To Maximize Troop Effectiveness ...
-
Aug 16, 2010GE Awarded $6.3 M DARPA Grant to Develop New Bio-inspired Se...
-
Aug 13, 2010Raytheon Awarded $90 M Under Battle Command Development Cont...
-
Apr 28, 2010GE and Rolls-Royce Propose Fixed Price Offer for JSF Engine
-
Apr 27, 2010GE - Satellite to Provide Ku Capacity for Historical UAV Sci...
-
Apr 15, 2010GE Intelligent Platforms Completes Delivery of $6.5 M Boeing...
-
Oct 16, 2009GE Fanuc Intelligent Platforms Receives $1 M To Equip IAS
More Engines / Power / Fuel
-
Sep 9, 2010Deployed Air Refueling Unit Helps Fuel the Afghanistan Surge
-
Sep 8, 2010Honeywell Signs Service Agreement With Vector Aerospace UK
-
Sep 6, 2010C-17 Conducts Flight Test With Biofuel
-
Sep 6, 2010IAI Completed Flight Tests of Colombian AF's Boeing 767 Air ...
-
Sep 6, 2010Cri-Cri, the All-Electric Aircraft, is Airborne
-
Sep 4, 2010Airliner lands with engine on fire
-
Sep 2, 2010Elbit Signs Agreement to Acquire Mikal's Holdings in Soltam,...
More Military Aircraft
-
Sep 9, 2010Future Missile System for Gripen
-
Sep 9, 2010BAE Launches USAF Jet Trainer Replacement Program
-
Sep 9, 2010Deployed Air Refueling Unit Helps Fuel the Afghanistan Surge
-
Sep 9, 2010Afghan Fleet of G.222 Reach Flight-Hour Milestone
-
Sep 8, 2010Delivery Of Weapons System Rig Supports Typhoon On The Front...
-
Sep 8, 2010NGC DAS for F-35 Demos Ballistic Missile Defense Capabilitie...
-
Sep 8, 2010Boeing Military Aircraft Realigns to Position for Future Gro...


Print
Email
