The U.S. Navy’s MQ-25 is being developed as a carrier-based aerial refueler, but an intelligence agency is showing interest in the unmanned aircraft system for a maritime surveillance role.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) has commissioned
to study the integration requirements for installing the company’s Multi-Mission Pod (MMP) on the MQ-25.
Boeing developed the MMP using internal funding for the
, a submarine hunter derived from the
. It is designed to carry multiple payloads, including communication and electronic intelligence receivers.
The NGA-sponsored study will evaluate how to use the MMP to introduce the agency’s “maritime program” on the P-8A and MQ-25 fleets.
The agency on Sept. 30 published a “justification and approval” notice for the study contract awarded to Boeing in May. Such notices are required to justify any contract awarded to a single contractor without a competition.
In this case, the sole source award was justified because the MQ-25 is still early in the development phase, the NGA says, so Boeing is the only company that has access to the design data.
The Navy awarded Boeing an $805 million in August 2018 to deliver four MQ-25 aircraft during the engineering and manufacturing development phase. The overall value of the deal has since risen to $944 million, of which $436 million, or 46.1%, has been obligated, according to the USASpending.gov procurement tracking site.
Last month, Boeing completed the first flight of a company-funded test asset for the MQ-25 program at an airport in Illinois.
The study also suggests the P-8A and MQ-25 fleet could be used to help replace the electronic intelligence capability once performed by the Lockheed EP-3E fleet. The Navy has said that the EP-3E will be replaced by a family of manned and unmanned aircraft, including the P-8A and the MQ-4C unmanned aircraft system.