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Feb 10, 2010
RFP PARA EL FUTURO CISTERNA DE LA USAF NO ANTES DEL 23 DE FEBERO/RFP FOR KC-X TANKER NOT BEFORE FEB. 23
Según Reuter la USAF emitirá su RFP para su futuro avión de reabastecimiento en vuelo no antes del 23 de febrero.> La USAF anunción que el concurso será completamente abierto. Northrop Grumman Corp y su socio europero EADS gaanaron el concurso en Febrero de 2008, pero el Pentágono lo canceló después la auditoría del gobierno solicitada por el perdedor, Boeing Co. Northrop ha anunciado que no competirá si no se hacen profundas modificaciones en la RFP, que dice estar orientada en favor del mas pequeño Boeing 767. El pasado 8 de febrero, la USAF, dijo que el precio sería fijo para los cuatro aviones de desarrollo y los 175 de producción, con 15 aviones por año. El ganador debería ser anunciado en el último trimestre del año fiscal 2010, que finaliza el 30 de septiembre de 2010. La competición excluirá a proveedores extranjeros, debido al secreto de algunas de las informaciones del concurso. La postura de Northrop no ha cambiado, ya que piensa que la estructura del concurso no ha cambiado sustancialmente y no va a poder responder, aunque examinará la propuesta y espera " que los competidores puedan competir en condiciones de igualdad."
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According Reuter US Air Force sees tanker rules out after Feb. 23 The U.S. Air Force plans to issue final terms soon, but not before Feb. 23, for bids on a multibillion-dollar contract to build aircraft-refueling tankers.
"This acquisition will be a full and open, best value competition," the Air Force said in a pre-solicitation notice posted on Monday on the federal business opportunities website. Northrop Grumman Corp and its European partner EADS won a projected $35 billion contract in February 2008 to build the mid-air refueling tankers for the Air Force, but the Pentagon canceled the contract after government auditors upheld a protest by losing bidder Boeing Co. Northrop has said it will not bid in the current competition unless the Air Force makes significant changes to a draft request for proposals (RFP) released last September that Northrop says is skewed to favor Boeing's smaller 767 tanker. On Monday, the Air Force said it planned to issue a fixed-price type contract for development of a new aerial refueling tanker, including four developmental aircraft and options for up to 175 production planes, based on existing commercial designs, at a rate of about 15 planes per year. It said proposals would be due 75 days from the date of the final request for proposals, and a winner would be chosen in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2010, which ends Sept. 30.It said the competition would exclude an award to a foreign prime contractor, "based on the required access to restricted information during contract performance." Northrop said its position had not changed. "Northrop Grumman feels that the current draft RFP, as structured, fails the test of true competition and, without meaningful changes, is not an RFP to which Northrop Grumman can respond," said spokesman. He said the company would examine the final RFP when it was released in the coming weeks, and hoped it would be structured in such a way that allowed "both competitors to believe they can compete fairly and win."
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