EELV Contracts: After the Merger
Related Stories: Americas - USA, Boeing, Contracts - Awards, Launch Facilities, Launch Vehicles, Lockheed Martin, Satellites & Sensors, Spotlight articles

The EELV program was designed to reduce the cost of government space launches through greater contractor competition, and modifiable rocket families whose system requirements emphasized simplicity, commonality, standardization, new applications of existing technology, streamlined manufacturing capabilities, and more efficient launch-site processing. Paradoxically, that very program may have forced the October 2006 merger of Boeing & Lockheed Martin’s rocket divisions.
Crosslink Magazine’s Winter 2004 article “EELV: The Next Stage of Space Launch” offers an excellent briefing that covers EELV’s program innovations and results, while a detailed National Taxpayer’s Union letter to Congress takes a much less positive view.
This DID Spotlight article looks at the contracts that have been placed since the merger was completed. The latest development is a major extension to Boeing’s Delta IV contract…
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Gain immediate access to Defense Industry Insider coverage of the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle rocket program when you subscribe. Our cross-linked article network and reference materials include:
- Tracking of contracts to Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and the United Launch Alliance; McDonnell Douglas Corp., and others More coverage from DII including: "The US FTC Clears Boeing-Lockheed Space Launch Merger," "Boeing & Lockheed Merge Rocket Divisions," "Next-Stage C4ISR Bandwidth: The US Military's AEHF Program," "The Wideband Gapfiller Satellite Program" and more
- Program background and goals, links to additional corporate resources, fact sheets and related articles
- 3 photos and illustrations
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