Lockheed, Pentagon claim they’re reining in F-35
sustainment costs
Sep 1, 07:27 PM
U.S. Air Force and South Korean Air Force F-35A fighters fly over the
Asian nation on July 12, 2022. The jet's manufacturer and the Pentagon say sustainment
costs are dropping. (Senior Airman Trevor Gordnier/U.S. Air Force)
WASHINGTON — After years of criticism over
sustainment costs of the F-35
fighter, Lockheed Martin and the Pentagon on Wednesday said they are seeing
progress in driving down the bill, and they believe the trend will continue.
Lockheed and the F-35 Joint Program Office did not
release the annual cost per tail in 2021 for the jet. But in a statement, JPO
spokesman Chief Petty Officer Matthew Olay said the amount fell from numbers
recorded in 2020.
According to a Government Accountability Office
report, it cost the Air Force in 2020 about $7.8 million to fly one of its
F-35As. That was nearly double the service’s $4.1 million goal.
One of the Navy’s F-35Cs, the aircraft carrier
variant, cost $9.9 million to fly in 2020 — more than the $7.5 million goal.
For a single Marine Corps F-35B, the short-takeoff-and-vertical-landing
variant, the cost came to $9.1 million that year; and for one F-35C, the bill
came to $7.9 million. The Corps’ cost goals for both variants are $6.8 million
each.
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