BAE, SAIC to Build Marine Troop Carrier Prototypes
24 Noviembre 2015 - 11:17PM
Noticias Dow Jones
By Doug Cameron
Science Applications International Corp. and a unit of BAE
Systems PLC will compete to design a new amphibious truck for the
Marine Corps, a highly prized contract that analysts estimate could
ultimately be worth around $1.5 billion.
The Pentagon on Tuesday said the Marines awarded the two
companies deals to build prototypes for the long-planned Amphibious
Combat Vehicle, which is designed to ferry troops ashore and into
battle. One of the companies will be chosen in 2018 to build more
than 200 troop carriers to replace Vietnam-era equipment.
The companies beat three rivals in what is expected to be the
final big-ticket U.S. defense award of 2015, with Lockheed Martin
Corp. failing for the third time this year to break into a new
market.
The five-way development contest had been viewed by analysts as
wide open, with General Dynamics Corp. and Advanced Defense Vehicle
Systems Corp. also fielding entrants.
The decision marks the latest stage in a quest lasting more than
25 years that has included the cancellation of previous projects
because of cost and technical problems, and the redesign of what
was meant to be a land-only armored carrier for seaborne use to
make it more affordable and suited to the Marines'
requirements.
The U.K.'s BAE is a longtime supplier of military vehicles while
SAIC, in McLean, Va., is better known as a provider of services
rather than weapons, though it has deals to support the existing
amphibious carriers.
Both partnered with overseas defense companies to offer modified
versions of existing vehicles. SAIC proposed a version of the
Terrex carrier developed by Singapore Technologies Engineering Ltd.
BAE teamed with Italy's Iveco, a unit of CNH Industrial NV.
SAIC and the BAE unit will each build 16 eight-wheeled vehicles
for testing, subject to available funding, with the winner expected
to deliver the 204 production carriers to the Marines by 2020 at an
average cost of $6.5 million apiece. A potential follow-on deal
would involve 490 more armored vehicles, though the specifications
are likely to be changed by that time.
For Lockheed, the latest loss follows its defeat by Oshkosh
Corp. in the pursuit of a $6.75 billion contract to build almost
17,000 new trucks to replace aging Humvees for the Army and
Marines, as well as its drubbing by Northrop Grumman Corp. in a
larger deal to develop a new long-range bomber. Lockheed has
protested both decisions.
Write to Doug Cameron at doug.cameron@wsj.com
Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 25, 2015 00:02 ET (05:02 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2015 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
Singapore Tech Engineering (PK) (USOTC:SGGKY)
Gráfica de Acción Histórica
De Dic 2024 a Ene 2025
Singapore Tech Engineering (PK) (USOTC:SGGKY)
Gráfica de Acción Histórica
De Ene 2024 a Ene 2025