SpaceX’s winning bid to launch the second GPS III satellite is about 40 percent cheaper than the government estimate for previous missions, Lt. Gen. Samuel Greaves, commander of the Space and Missile Systems Center, told reporters Thursday. The contract award, which was announced Wednesday, will be the first of nine competitively awarded contracts for national security space missions as part of the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle Phase 1A acquisition strategy, Greaves said. Introducing competition into space launch allows the Air Force to balance mission success and operational needs, while lowering launch costs and promoting innovation, he added. SpaceX is one of only two companies certified for national security space launches, though they are still waiting for “mission assurance return to flight” status for USAF launches, after the explosion of a Falcon 9 rocket in June 2015. Greaves said he has approved the status for SpaceX, but Congress must still sign off on the decision.
Lockheed Martin is taking a “home run” approach to self-funded research and development by going ahead and building full prototypes to show to the U.S. government, CEO Jim Taiclet said Oct. 20—a plan he hinted could apply to technology the company is hoping to shift to the F-35 from its…