Pentagon Says F-35 Flight Hour Stretch Goal Unachievable
The Pentagon admits its $25,000 flight hour stretch goal for the Lockheed Martin F-35A is unrealistic to attain by fiscal 2025.
There are several studies ongoing surrounding F-35 flight hour cost at the Pentagon and there is no path to get to $25,000 by fiscal 2025. Currently, the F-35A cost per flight hour is $44,000, Bob Daigle, Cost Assessment And Program Evaluation (CAPE) director, told the House Armed Services tactical air and land forces subcommittee May 2.
“That’s a target and it’s not our projection of where we’re actually going to be,” Daigle said.
Meanwhile, Lockheed Martin said in February the company was committed to the $25,000 cost target goal by 2025. “I have a lot of confidence we’re going to get there. And every day I see the actions of that partnership,” said O.J. Sanchez, sustainment innovation and operations vice president.
The F-35 enterprise highlights flight hour cost targets in its lifecycle sustainability plan (LSP) that was approved in January. The LSP has eight lines of effort that assess cost per flying hour, cost per tail per year and overall ownership cost, Vice Adm. Mat Winter, F-35 program executive officer, told reporters May 2 after the subcommittee hearing.
“All of those levers that are in the LSP give us the confidence that we can go from $44,000 a flight hour to $34,000 a flight hour in 2024,” Winter said.
The LSP has the $25,000 flight hour stretch goal by 2025 in the document. “That will be very, very hard to meet but it’s FY ‘19 right now and we have a number of years,” he said.
On average the cost per flight hour for the F-35 must be reduced by 7-12% each year. “The 25 by 25 wasn’t generated by the program office nor the CAPE. It was stretch goal given to us by our leadership,” Winter said.
https://aviationweek.com/defense/pentagon-says-f-35-flight-hour-stretch-goal-unachievable