- â–º $225.1 million modification awarded to Northrop Grumman Systems Corp.
- â–º Covers design, development, and delivery of E-130J training weapons systems courseware.
- â–º Supports the Navy Take Charge and Move Out recapitalization program.
- â–º Work to be completed by March 2027 across Florida and Oklahoma.
- â–º Contract managed by Naval Air Systems Command, Patuxent River.
Northrop Grumman Awarded E-130J Training Systems Contract Worth $225 Million
The Northrop Grumman E-130J contractmarks a significant step in the US Navy’s Take Charge and Move Out recapitalization effort, with the Pentagon awarding a $225.1 million modification for training systems development and delivery.
The Department of Defense announced that Northrop Grumman Systems Corp., based in Melbourne, Florida, received a cost-plus-incentive-fee modification valued at $225,109,424. The award exercises options for the design, development, and delivery of comprehensive E-130J weapons systems training materials and courseware.
The aircraft was previously referred to as E-XX before its official designation as E-130J.
Supporting The Take Charge And Move Out Program
The E-130J training systems contract directly supports the Navy’s Take Charge and Move Out recapitalization program. The initiative aims to modernize key airborne command and control capabilities, ensuring continuity of strategic communications and operational readiness.
Training systems are central to that effort. As new platforms transition from development to operational service, the Navy must field fully integrated courseware, simulators, and instructional materials. Without a mature training pipeline, even advanced aircraft cannot reach full operational capability on schedule.
Under this modification, Northrop Grumman will deliver all required training weapons systems materials, covering aircrew and maintenance training components. The cost-plus-incentive-fee structure reflects the technical complexity and evolving requirements typical of advanced training system development.
Workshare And Funding Details
According to the Pentagon, work under the Northrop Grumman E-130J contract will be performed in:
- Orlando, Florida, 64 percent
- Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 31 percent
- Melbourne, Florida, 5 percent
The effort is expected to conclude by March 2027.
At the time of award, $54.9 million in fiscal 2026 Navy research, development, test and evaluation funds were obligated. Notably, these funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year, providing flexibility for program execution.
The contract was competitively awarded and is managed by Naval Air Systems Command, headquartered in Patuxent River, Maryland. NAVAIR oversees procurement, development, and sustainment of naval aviation systems across the fleet.
Strategic Context And Program Significance
While the aircraft’s operational mission details remain limited in public disclosures, the E-130J designation signals alignment with the C-130J airframe family. That suggests a proven platform adapted for specialized Navy requirements, consistent with recapitalization priorities focused on survivability, reliability, and interoperability.
The training systems portion of the program is more than an administrative milestone. Historically, delays in courseware development have slowed fielding timelines across multiple US aviation programs. By awarding this modification early in the lifecycle, the Navy appears intent on synchronizing platform delivery with training readiness.
From a defense budgeting perspective, the award also reflects sustained congressional support for naval aviation modernization. Research and development funding commitments indicate the program remains in an active maturation phase rather than full-rate production.
Industry And Capability Implications
For Northrop Grumman, the E-130J training systems contract strengthens its role in high-end mission systems integration and training solutions. The company has longstanding experience delivering airborne command, control, and ISR systems across multiple US services.
As recapitalization efforts accelerate across the Department of Defense, integrated training solutions are becoming a core requirement rather than a follow-on activity. Digital courseware, simulation environments, and mission rehearsal systems now form a critical part of operational readiness.
The Northrop Grumman E-130J contract underscores that reality. Training systems are no longer secondary to aircraft procurement. They are a foundational element of capability delivery.
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