NASA Awards External Tank Contract Modification

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April 30, 2008

Michael Curie
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-4715
michael.curie@xxxxxxxx

Steve Roy
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.
256-544-0034
steven.e.roy@xxxxxxxx

CONTRACT RELEASE: C08-024

NASA AWARDS EXTERNAL TANK CONTRACT MODIFICATION

WASHINGTON -- NASA has signed a $39.5 million contract modification 
with Lockheed Martin Space Systems, New Orleans, to implement an 
external tank program employee retention plan. Incentives are being 
provided to eligible external tank personnel to ensure mission 
success and construction of the remaining external tanks to support 
Space Shuttle Program requirements through September 2010.

Retention of the knowledgeable and skilled external tank workforce is 
necessary to produce the remaining shuttle hardware and safely 
execute all remaining contract requirements. This modification 
supports the agency's priorities of safely flying the space shuttle 
and completing construction of the International Space Station.

The contract will end September 30, 2010. This modification brings the 
total value of the contract, awarded in October 2000, to $2.967 
billion. The contract calls for the delivery of 18 external tanks to 
NASA. Eleven tanks remain to be delivered.

Work will be performed at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New 
Orleans; NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala.; and 
NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla.

Lockheed Martin builds, assembles and tests the space shuttle external 
tanks for NASA at the Michoud facility. The external tank holds the 
liquid hydrogen fuel and liquid oxygen for the shuttle's three main 
engines. It is the largest single component of the space shuttle and 
the only part of the shuttle that is not reused. 

At 154 feet tall, the tank is taller than a 15-story building, with a 
diameter of about 27.5 feet. During launch, the tank acts as the 
structural backbone for the shuttle orbiter and the solid rocket 
boosters attached to it. For more information about NASA's Space 
Shuttle Program, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/shuttle

	
-end-



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