Daily Report

Feb. 8, 2012

A Blueprint for Energy

In the future, Air Force aircraft might operate off advanced engines and fuels providing double-digit increases in loiter time and range. In the space domain, revolutionary new technologies could allow for on-orbit refueling of spacecraft. Further, the use of smart grids and "solar-to-petrol plants" could help both fixed and expeditionary bases gain energy independence. These are just some of the short- and long-term goals outlined in "Energy Horizons," the Air Force's new technology vision paper. It provides a blueprint for science and technology investment in air, space, cyber, and infrastructure to increase energy supply, reduce demand, and promote operational readiness, resiliency, and robustness in the near term (one to five years out), mid-term (six to 10 years), and long-term (11 to 15 years). "Across all Air Force domains of operations, Energy Horizons identifies game-changing technologies in energy generation, storage, and use," states the executive summary, obtained by the Daily Report. Secretary Michael Donley in late January approved Energy Horizons for public release. It's the service's second recent S&T blueprint, following Technology Horizons, publicly issued in July 2010. (Energy Horizons executive summary text; we'll post the full document as soon as we have it.)

Former ACC Boss Discusses New Bomber

The Air Force’s next-generation bomber must be capable of strategic deterrence as well as precision strike, said retired Gen. John Corley, former Air Combat Command boss. Contrasted with historical stealth, “for this bomber to have value, it’s got to have...

Proto-tipping the Scales in One’s Favor

The competitive technology-development phase of major weapons acquisition programs has deviated from its original intent in an unwanted way, said Frank Kendall, the Pentagon’s acting acquisition executive. Conceived to reduce risk in a program’s subsequent engineering and manufacturing development phase...

The Fix Isn’t In

Fixed-price contracts for low-rate production of weapons systems haven’t proven to be a significant cost saver compared to the cost-plus arrangements the Defense Department has been migrating away from, said Frank Kendall, acting Pentagon acquisition boss. “The data I’ve seen...

On the Hunt for MANPADS in Libya

The United States is currently engaged in Libya “in the most extensive effort to combat the proliferation” of shoulder-fired anti-aircraft missiles in US history, said Andrew Shapiro, assistant secretary of state for political-military affairs. Thus far, teams of US officials,...

Ocean Relay for Life

California Air National Guardsmen, flying two HH-60G Pave Hawks from Moffett Federal Airfield northwest of San Jose, rescued an ailing sailor from a vessel under way some 200 miles off the California coast. Refueling en-route by an MC-130P tanker allowed...

Afghan Airman Flips the Script at Shindand

Air advisors from the 838th Air Expeditionary Advisory Group at Shindand AB, Afghanistan, experienced a role reversal as they became students of an Afghan airman for a class on aircraft marshaling. Normally taught by US advisors to their replacements or...

Scott Aeromedical Squadron Gets New Home

Officials at Scott AFB, Ill., unveiled the new $7.4 million, energy-efficient building that will house the 375th Aeromedical Evacuation Squadron and its 163 active duty, Air National Guard, and Air Force Reserve members. The new facility replaces a 70-year-old “condemned...

Potential Polish F-16 Weapons and Support Deal Announced

The Pentagon notified Congress of a potential $447 million foreign military sale to Poland for support and munitions, as well as associated equipment, parts, training, and logistical assistance, for its fleet of 48 F-16s. The proposed deal would include 93...