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Wed, Aug 23, 2006

Boeing Says Problems Will Delay NextGen GPS Deployment

Soonest Launch Now May 2008

Technical difficulties and late hardware deliveries are behind a significant delay in the deployment of the US Air Force's next generation global positioning system, Boeing announced Tuesday.

The problems encountered in the development of 12 GPS satellites -- to be used for both military and civilian purposes -- will delay launch of the first satellites in the $1.9 billiojn program by 16 months. The Chicago Tribune reports the first launch was set for next January; the soonest it will now happen is May 2008.

In a statement to Reuters, the Air Force blamed the delays on the complexity of the satellites' circuit design, the enormity of the assembly and integration effort, and late delivery of some components by Boeing subcontractors.

It did not disclose how much the delays are expected to add to the cost of the program... but nearly everyone agrees, it won't be cheap. The Air Force is now reviewing the fee structure of its contract with the Chicago-based aerospace manufacturer.

For its part, Boeing says it is taking "aggressive steps" to resolve the difficulties... pointing out such issues "were not atypical for advanced spacecraft development projects."

FMI: www.boeing.com, www.af.mil

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