Det er ikke rart Pentagon ser på alternative løsninger, i.e. generation 4+ fly. (Red.)
Estimated development
costs for the F-35′s modernization program increased by $1.9B in a year
By: Valerie Insinna 1 day ago
An F-35 from the 34th
Fighter Squadron at Hill Air Force Base, Utah, lands at Royal Air Force
Lakenheath, England, on April 19, 2017. (Staff Sgt. Emerson Nuñez/U.S. Air
Force)
WASHINGTON —
The estimated development costs for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter’s ongoing
modernization program grew by $1.9 billion since 2019, and the effort is
expected to extend though 2027, the U.S. Government Accountability Office said
in a new March 18 report.
Over the
course of the F-35′s Block 4 modernization program, which
officially began in 2018, the Pentagon will
upgrade the Lockheed Martin-produced jet’s hardware and software, adding new
weapons capabilities and computing systems.
But due to
challenges in developing and testing some of those new technologies, as well as
continued schedule delays, the U.S. Defense Department’s most recent estimate
in 2020 shows that Block 4 development is now projected to reach $14.4
billion, the GAO said.
Meanwhile, the
modernization effort — which was initially expected to wrap up in 2026 — is now
scheduled to conclude one year later, though the GAO noted that the schedule is
based on “estimates formulated at the start of the Block 4 effort” and not
Lockheed’s demonstrated performance. Therefore, it is possible “the scheduled
2027 completion date is not achievable,” the watchdog stated.
The GAO listed
a number of reasons for the $1.9 billion in cost growth. A cost increase for
flight tests resulted in an additional $705 million charge; overhead and
administrative costs ballooned by $471 million; and the cost of a new training
lab added $336 million. A package of computing system upgrades, known as
Technology Refresh 3, experienced a $296 million cost increase.
The news of
the cost increases comes weeks after Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. CQ Brown
acknowledged the service is conducting a tactical aircraft study to explore
whether it should buy fewer F-35s. Currently, the U.S. Air Force is the F-35′s largest customer, with 1,763 F-35As included in the service’s program
of record.
House Armed
Services Committee Chairman Adam Smith, D-Wash., indicated his own frustration with F-35 program
costs during a March 5 event where he said the nation should “stop throwing
money down that particular rathole.”
In a
statement, F-35 program executive Lt. Gen. Eric Fick said the government
continues to make progress on Block 4. “Program risks still exist, but are well
understood and actively managed,” he said.
The Pentagon
previously issued a seven-year cost estimate for the Block 4 effort, claiming
in 2018 that the program would cost $10.6 billion from fiscal 2018 to fiscal
2024. The department did not provide data on fiscal 2025 to fiscal 2026, when
the program was originally slated to end.
The new $14.4 billion cost
estimate covers all years associated with the program, including Block
4-related costs dating back as far as FY13. “However, over half of the increase
since we reported last year — $1.9 billion — is net cost growth within various
aspects of the Block 4 development program” and cannot be attributed to prior
years’ costs or planned expenses during fiscal 2025 to fiscal 2026, the GAO
said.
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