Coast Guard Meets with Lockheed, Northrop

January 24, 2007

U.S. Coast Guard Commandant Adm. Thad Allen met last week with chief executive officers from Lockheed Martin Corp. (LMT) and Northrop Grumman Corp. (NOC) to discuss his agency's $24b modernization program, which has struggled with rising costs and technical difficulties. Lockheed Martin CEO Robert Stevens and Northrop Grumman CEO Ron Sugar met with Allen to talk about the Deepwater program's new management plan, the Coast Guard said.

The Deepwater program is a 25-year effort to replace a wide variety of aging ships and aircraft. Costs have ballooned from the original $17b estimate, and critics have said the program's shipbuilding troubles show that the Coast Guard isn't equipped to manage such a big project. But the companies say much of the project has gone well, and they attribute the higher cost estimates to changes in the Coast Guard's requirements.

Allen has made a series of changes in recent months to beef up oversight, through new independent cost reviews and reinforced technical supervision. He also is set to add a new procurement chief next month, when he unveils a larger vision for the Coast Guard's future.

Integrated Coast Guard Systems, the joint venture in charge of the Deepwater contract, said the meeting is part of an overall good relationship with the Coast Guard. Source: Marketwatch

Related News

Commissioning of Russia's 120MW Nuclear Icebreaker Postponed Sapura Ônix Heads to Atlanta Field to Install Subsea Equipment ESL Shipping's First Plug-in Hybrid Vessel Electramar Christened Houthis Will Target All Ships Heading to Israel, Group Says US Says Warship Intercepted Houthi Missile, Merchant Vessel Untouched