Protecting ships and sailors with modernized underwater mine hunting capability.
The U.S. Navy's Naval Sea Systems Command has awarded General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems a contract to design and build the Surface Mine Countermeasure Unmanned Underwater Vehicle (SMCM UUV) system. The system will initially be a part of the Littoral Combat Ship Mine Warfare mission package. The contract has a maximum potential value of $86.7 million for one Engineering Development Model (EDM) and five low-rate initial production systems if all options are exercised. General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems is a business unit of General Dynamics (NYSE:GD).
The SMCM UUV system will allow Navy commanders and sailors to reliably detect and identify mines in high-clutter underwater environments in a single pass, including mines that are suspended in the ocean, resting on the sea floor or buried. Additionally, it will gather environmental data that can provide intelligence support for other mine warfare systems.
"General Dynamics continues to deliver affordable, flexible solutions that meet the Navy's vision for open architecture," said Lou Von Thaer, president of General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems. "Commanders and sailors will now have the most capable and advanced system available to detect, avoid and defeat mine threats."
General Dynamics will use an open systems architecture approach to ensure the SMCM UUV will have the flexibility to be integrated into missions on Littoral Combat Ships, as well as other ship types. The Navy's evolving and dynamic mission requirements call for a design that allows plug and play integration for ships' systems and mission modules. These interchangeable packages of specialized equipment allow the Navy to quickly reconfigure a ship for changing mission requirements.
General Dynamics plans to hire 10 new employees to support this contract. The development and manufacturing will be done in Greensboro, N.C., Fairfax, Va., Quincy, Mass., Braintree, Mass., and Panama City, Fla.
The General Dynamics Advanced Information Systems team includes Bluefin Robotics, Quincy, Mass.; Ultra Electronics Ocean Systems, Braintree, Mass.; and Oceaneering International, Houston, TX.
The program office for this contract is the Unmanned Maritime Systems Program Office (PMS 406), one of six program offices within the Navy's Program Executive Office, Littoral Combat Ship (PEO LCS).
More information about General Dynamics is available online at www.generaldynamics.com.