NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility Manufactures Liquid Natural Gas Tanks for Lockheed Martin

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March 12, 2013

Trent J. Perrotto 
Headquarters, Washington                             
202-358-1100 
trent.j.perrotto@xxxxxxxx 

Angela Storey 
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. 
256-544-0034 
angela.d.storey@xxxxxxxx 

Chip Howat 
Michoud Assembly Facility, New Orleans 
504-257-0478 
carl.j.howat@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 13-074

NASA'S MICHOUD ASSEMBLY FACILITY MANUFACTURES LIQUID NATURAL GAS TANKS FOR LOCKHEED MARTIN

NEW ORLEANS -- NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans, the 
agency's only large-scale advanced manufacturing facility, soon will 
be building liquefied natural gas (LNG) tanks with commercial 
applications on Earth. 

In a ceremony Tuesday that included Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, 
Lockheed Martin Corp. of Bethesda, Md., announced it is drawing on 
the unique experience and equipment at Michoud to manufacture the LNG 
tanks. Michoud also is crafting components for a new generation of 
NASA spacecraft that will take explorers deeper into space than they 
have traveled before. 

The new LNG manufacturing activity represents another innovative use 
of this storied human spaceflight production facility. It also is the 
continuation of NASA's commitment to build on the legacy of the Space 
Shuttle Program and be an engine of economic growth in the nation. 

"We are very pleased to add Lockheed Martin's liquefied natural gas 
tank production to the portfolio of advanced manufacturing work and 
research under way here," said Roy Malone, director of Michoud 
Assembly Facility. "It is gratifying to see the manufacturing 
processes and capabilities developed to build large space flight 
structures being put to use in the energy industry here on Earth." 

With a 37-year history of producing the giant external tank for the 
space shuttles, and as prime contractor for NASA's Orion spacecraft 
being built at Michoud, Lockheed Martin is familiar with the 
facility's capabilities. The agreement ultimately could lower 
facility costs at Michoud for government and industry users, and free 
up money for other space exploration goals. 

Producing LNGs requires the processes and capabilities of a large tank 
structure manufacturing site that Michoud is uniquely built to 
support. Lockheed Martin said it has received initial orders to 
manufacture cryogenic tanks for fueling LNG-powered vessels. As part 
of its longer-range business plan, Lockheed Martin will adapt 
production equipment used to manufacture the external tank for the 
space shuttle to a wide range of liquefied natural gas supply chain 
applications. 

"Our entry into the LNG tank market is a prime example of how Lockheed 
Martin is leveraging capabilities and technologies developed for 
government programs to meet the needs of private sector customers who 
drive our nation's economy," said Gerry Fasano, president of Lockheed 
Martin Information Systems & Global Solutions-Defense. "We look 
forward to a long-term relationship with the state of Louisiana and 
the greater New Orleans area, and to bringing quality employment 
opportunities to the community." 

NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility is a multi-tenant campus with 43 
acres of advanced manufacturing space under one roof. A number of 
private companies and government projects take advantage of the 
facility's key capabilities, including large-envelope fiber placement 
equipment, friction stir welding systems, high-speed machining tools, 
material test labs and manufacturing infrastructure. 

Managed and operated by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in 
Huntsville, Ala., Michoud built the Saturn S-1C and Saturn S-1B 
boosters for the Apollo program, and the large external tank for the 
shuttle program. It now is building the Orion spacecraft. The 
facility is being modified to manufacture the core stage of NASA's 
Space Launch System rocket, the most powerful ever built. 

For more information about NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility, visit: 

http://mafspace.msfc.nasa.gov 

	
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