PR Newswire  | 

U.S. Navy Awards Lockheed Martin $383 Million for Next Generation of U.S. Deterrence at Sea

PR Newswire

play Anhören
share Teilen
feedback Feedback
copy Kopieren
newsletter
font_big Schrift vergrößern
Lockheed Martin Corp 452,20 $ Lockheed Martin Corp Chart +0,86%
Zugehörige Wertpapiere:

Company will build production facility in Florida and add approximately 300 jobs to support strategic missile modernization 

TITUSVILLE, Fla., Jan. 31, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. Navy awarded Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) a $383 million cost-plus-incentive-fee and cost-plus-fixed-fee modification to the existing Lockheed Martin contract for development of the next generation of the Trident II Strategic Weapons System (SWS) D5 missile to continue the nation's sea-based strategic deterrence.

Under this contract modification, Lockheed Martin will design the upgraded missile, called the Trident II D5 Life Extension 2 (D5LE2). The integrated, modernized missile will be carried aboard COLUMBIA-class ballistic missile submarines to ensure the strategic weapon system remains credible through 2084.

"The second life extension of the Trident D5 missile will enable the United States and United Kingdom, through the Polaris Sales Agreement, to maintain credibility deterring evolving threats," said Jerry Mamrol, vice president of Fleet Ballistic Missiles at Lockheed Martin. "We are proud to continue our critical partnership with the U.S. Navy to take deterrence into this new era."

Advancing Deterrence

The D5 missile, built and upgraded by Lockheed Martin for the Navy, is the most advanced ballistic missile in the world and is currently aboard U.S. OHIO-class and U.K. VANGUARD-class submarines. This year, Lockheed Martin will mark 70 years of support to the Navy developing and sustaining the missiles that are the backbone for the nation's sea-based deterrence through the company's Fleet Ballistic Missiles (FBM) program.

Lockheed Martin's FBM program is critical to preserving American and allied security with a focus on innovation through advanced digital technology, modern facilities, and a culture of excellence.

New Florida Facility for the Future

Lockheed Martin is breaking ground on an approximately 225,000 square foot facility in Titusville, Florida to produce components for the D5LE2 submarine-launched ballistic missile.

The new facility expands Lockheed Martin's presence in Florida's Space Coast and is expected to add approximately 300 highly-skilled new jobs.

"Under Governor Ron DeSantis' leadership, Florida continues to invest in our aerospace and aviation, and military and defense industries – bringing high-skill, high-wage jobs to the state," said Florida Secretary of Commerce J. Alex Kelly. "Strategic investments like this continue to propel Florida's workforce, adding 300 new jobs and bringing economic success to Florida communities." 

The facility is anticipated to be ready for operations in 2027 to meet the Navy's production needs and support the service for the next 60 years.

About Lockheed Martin

Lockheed Martin is a global defense technology company driving innovation and advancing scientific discovery. Our all-domain mission solutions and 21st Century Security® vision accelerate the delivery of transformative technologies to ensure those we serve always stay ahead of ready. More information at www.Lockheedmartin.com.

Cision View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/us-navy-awards-lockheed-martin-383-million-for-next-generation-of-us-deterrence-at-sea-302365694.html

SOURCE Lockheed Martin


Für dich aus unserer Redaktion zusammengestellt

Dein Kommentar zum Artikel im Forum

Jetzt anmelden und diskutieren Registrieren Login

Hinweis: ARIVA.DE veröffentlicht in dieser Rubrik Analysen, Kolumnen und Nachrichten aus verschiedenen Quellen. Die ARIVA.DE AG ist nicht verantwortlich für Inhalte, die erkennbar von Dritten in den „News“-Bereich dieser Webseite eingestellt worden sind, und macht sich diese nicht zu Eigen. Diese Inhalte sind insbesondere durch eine entsprechende „von“-Kennzeichnung unterhalb der Artikelüberschrift und/oder durch den Link „Um den vollständigen Artikel zu lesen, klicken Sie bitte hier.“ erkennbar; verantwortlich für diese Inhalte ist allein der genannte Dritte.


Weitere Artikel des Autors

Themen im Trend