< Back to Current Version

Multiyear Procurement (MYP) and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition: Background and Issues for Congress

Changes from April 1, 2014 to May 20, 2014

This page shows textual changes in the document between the two versions indicated in the dates above. Textual matter removed in the later version is indicated with red strikethrough and textual matter added in the later version is indicated with blue.


Multiyear Procurement (MYP) and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition: Background and Issues for Congress Ronald O'Rourke Specialist in Naval Affairs Moshe Schwartz Specialist in Defense Acquisition April 1May 20, 2014 Congressional Research Service 7-5700 www.crs.gov R41909 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Summary Multiyear procurement (MYP) and block buy contracting (BBC) are special contracting mechanisms that Congress permits the Department of Defense (DOD) to use for a limited number of defense acquisition programs. Compared to the standard or default approach of annual contracting, MYP and BBC have the potential for reducing weapon procurement costs by several percent. Under annual contracting, DOD uses one or more contracts for each year’s worth of procurement of a given kind of item. Under MYP, DOD instead uses a single contract for two to five years’ worth of procurement of a given kind of item without having to exercise a contract option for each year after the first year. DOD needs congressional approval for each use of MYP. There is a permanent statute governing MYP contracting—10 U.S.C. 2306b. Under this statute, a program must meet several criteria to qualify for MYP. Compared with estimated costs under annual contracting, estimated savings for programs being proposed for MYP have ranged from less than 5% to more than 15%, depending on the particulars of the program in question, with many estimates falling in the range of 5% to 10%. In practice, actual savings from using MYP rather than annual contracting can be difficult to observe or verify because of cost growth during the execution of the contract due to changes in the program independent of the use of MYP rather than annual contracting. BBC is similar to MYP in that it permits DOD to use a single contract for more than one year’s worth of procurement of a given kind of item without having to exercise a contract option for each year after the first year. BBC is also similar to MYP in that DOD needs congressional approval for each use of BBC. BBC differs from MYP in the following ways: • There is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC. • There is no requirement that BBC be approved in both a DOD appropriations act and an act other than a DOD appropriations act. • Programs being considered for BBC do not need to meet any legal criteria to qualify for BBC, because there is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC that establishes such criteria. • A BBC contract can cover more than five years of planned procurements. • Economic order quantity (EOQ) authority—the authority to bring forward selected key components of the items to be procured under the contract and purchase the components in batch form during the first year or two of the contract—does not come automatically as part of BBC authority because there is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC that includes EOQ authority as an automatic feature. • BBC contracts are less likely to include cancellation penalties. Potential issues for Congress concerning MYP and BBC include whether to use MYP and BBC in the future more frequently, less frequently, or about as frequently as they are currently used; and whether to create a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC, analogous to the permanent statute that governs the use of MYP. Congressional Research Service Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Contents Introduction...................................................................................................................................... 1 Issues for Congress .................................................................................................................... 1 Terminology and Scope of Report ............................................................................................. 1 Block Buy Contracting vs. Air Force’s Block Buy of Two AEHF Satellites ...................... 1 Funding Approaches vs. Contracting Mechanisms ............................................................. 1 Scope of Report .....................................................Two Air Force “Block Buys” That Are Not Discussed in This Report ............................... 1 Funding Approaches vs. Contracting Mechanisms .............................................................. 2 1 Background ...................................................................................................................................... 2 Multiyear Procurement (MYP).................................................................................................. 2 MYP in Brief ....................................................................................................................... 2 Potential Savings Under MYP ............................................................................................ 3 Permanent Statute Governing MYP .................................................................................... 5 Potential Consequences of Not Fully Funding an MYP Contract ....................................... 7 Effect on Flexibility for Making Procurement Changes ..................................................... 7 Congressional Approval ...................................................................................................... 7 Block Buy Contracting (BBC) .................................................................................................. 9 BBC in Brief ....................................................................................................................... 9 Terminology Alert: Block Buy Contracting vs. Block Buys ............................................. 10 Potential Savings Under BBC ........................................................................................... 10 Frequency of Use of BBC ................................................................................................. 11 Using BBC Rather than MYP ........................................................................................... 11 MYP and BBC vs. Contracts with Options ............................................................................. 11 Issues for Congress ........................................................................................................................ 12 Frequency of Using MYP and BBC ........................................................................................ 12 Permanent Statute for BBC ..................................................................................................... 13 FY2015 Budget Submission Proposals That Could Affect Existing MYP and BBC Contracts........................ 13 Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs) Contracts ..................................................................................................................................... 13 Navy Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs) in FY2015 ............................................................... 13 Navy MH-60R Helicopters in FY2016 ................................................................ 13 MH-60R Helicopters............. 14 Legislative Activity for FY2015 ......................................................................................................... 13 Legislative Activity for FY2015 16 FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4435)...................................................... 16 House........................................................................................................ 14......................... 16 Tables Table A-1. Programs Approved for MYP in Annual DOD Appropriations Acts Since FY1990 ....................................................................................................................................... 1518 Appendixes Appendix. Programs Approved for MYP in Annual DOD Appropriations Acts Since FY1990 ....................................................................................................................................... 1518 Congressional Research Service Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Contacts Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 1821 Congressional Research Service Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Introduction Issues for Congress This report provides background information and issues for Congress on multiyear procurement (MYP) and block buy contracting (BBC),1 which are special contracting mechanisms that Congress permits the Department of Defense (DOD) to use for a limited number of defense acquisition programs. Compared to the standard or default approach of annual contracting, MYP and BBC have the potential for reducing weapon procurement costs by several percent. Potential issues for Congress concerning MYP and BBC include whether to use MYP and BBC in the future more frequently, less frequently, or about as frequently as they are currently used; and whether to create a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC, analogous to the permanent statute (10 U.S.C. 2306b) that governs the use of MYP. Congress’s decisions on these issues could affect defense acquisition practices, defense funding requirements, and the defense industrial base. Terminology and Scope of Report Block Buy Contracting vs. Air Force’s Block BuyTwo Air Force “Block Buys” That Are Not Discussed in This Report Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) Launch Services (ELS) Contract A contract that the Air Force has for the procurement of Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) Launch Services (ELS) is sometimes referred to as a block buy, but it is not an example of block buy contracting as discussed in this report. The Air Force in this instance is using the term block buy to mean something different. This report does not discuss the ELS contract. Procurement of Two AEHF Satellites For FY2015, the Air Force is requesting continued procurement funding for two Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellites that were procured in FY2012 and partially funded in FY2012-FY2014. Although the Air Force refers to this two-satellite procurement as a block buy, it is not an example of block buy contracting as discussed in this report. The Air Force in this instance is using the term block buy to mean something different. For further discussion of this different use of the term block buy, see , see “Terminology Alert: Block Buy Contracting vs. Block Buys” below. Funding Approaches vs. Contracting Mechanisms In discussing MYP and BBC, it can be helpful to distinguish funding approaches from contracting mechanisms. The two are often mixed together in discussions of DOD acquisition, sometimes leading to confusion. Stated briefly: • Funding approaches are ways that Congress can appropriate funding for weapon procurement programs, so that DOD can then put them under contract. Examples of funding approaches include traditional full funding (the standard or default approach), incremental funding, and advance appropriations.2 Any of 1 MYP is an established acronym for multiyear procurement. BBC is not an established acronym for block buy contracting, but is used in this CRS report for purposes of convenience. 2 For more on these three funding approaches, see CRS Report RL31404, Defense Procurement: Full Funding Policy— Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Stephen Daggett, and CRS Report RL32776, Navy Ship Procurement: Alternative Funding Approaches—Background and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. Advance appropriations, which are not to be confused with advance procurement (AP) funding (see footnote 3), are essentially a legislatively locked-in form of incremental funding. Unlike incremental funding, advance (continued...) Congressional Research Service 1 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition 1 MYP is an established acronym for multiyear procurement. BBC is not an established acronym for block buy contracting, but is used in this CRS report for purposes of convenience. Congressional Research Service 1 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition • Funding approaches are ways that Congress can appropriate funding for weapon procurement programs, so that DOD can then put them under contract. Examples of funding approaches include traditional full funding (the standard or default approach), incremental funding, and advance appropriations.2 Any of these funding approaches might make use of advance procurement (AP) funding.3 • Contracting mechanisms are ways for DOD to contract for the procurement of weapons systems, once funding for those systems has been appropriated by Congress. Examples of contracting mechanisms include annual contracting (the standard or default approach), MYP, and BBC. The use of a particular funding approach in a defense acquisition program does not dictate the use of a particular contracting mechanism. Defense acquisition programs consequently can be implemented using various combinations of funding approaches and contracting mechanisms. Most DOD weapon acquisition programs use a combination of traditional full funding and annual contracting. A few programs, particularly certain Navy shipbuilding programs, use incremental funding as their funding approach. A limited number of DOD programs use MYP as their contracting approach, and to date at least two defense acquisition programs (both Navy shipbuilding programs) use or have used BBC as their contracting approach. Scope of Report This report focuses on the contracting approaches of MYP and BBC and how they compare to annual contracting. Other CRS reports discuss the funding approaches of traditional full funding, incremental funding, and advance appropriations.4 This report does not discuss the Air Force’s procurement of two Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellites in FY2012, except, as noted above, to explain why it is not an example of block buy contracting as discussed in this report. Background Multiyear Procurement (MYP) MYP in Brief What is MYP, and how does it differ from annual contracting? MYP, also known as multiyear contracting, is an alternative to the standard or default DOD approach of annual contracting. Under annual contracting, DOD uses one or more contracts for each year’s worth of procurement (...continued) Background Multiyear Procurement (MYP) MYP in Brief What is MYP, and how does it differ from annual contracting? MYP, also known as multiyear contracting, is an alternative to the standard or default DOD approach of annual contracting. 2 For more on these three funding approaches, see CRS Report RL31404, Defense Procurement: Full Funding Policy— Background, Issues, and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke and Stephen Daggett, and CRS Report RL32776, Navy Ship Procurement: Alternative Funding Approaches—Background and Options for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. Advance appropriations, which are not to be confused with advance procurement (AP) funding (see footnote 3), are essentially a legislatively locked-in form of incremental funding. Unlike incremental funding, advance appropriations qualify under budgeting regulations as a form of full funding. 3 AP funding is provided in one or more years prior to the year of procurement of a weapon system for the procurement of long-leadtime components—components with long construction times. Such components must be funded prior to the procurement of the remainder of the weapon system if they are to be ready for installation in the weapon system at the appropriate point in the construction process. AP funding is a permitted exception to the full funding provision. AP funding is not to be confused with advance appropriations (see footnote 2). 4 See footnote 2 for citations to these reports. Appropriating funding for a program and placing a program under contract are steps in a larger sequence of budget-related events that includes authorization, appropriation, obligation, and outlays. For a general discussion of this sequence, see CRS Report 98-721, Introduction to the Federal Budget Process, coordinated by Bill Heniff Jr. Congressional Research Service 2 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Under annual contracting, DOD uses one or more contracts for each year’s worth of procurement of a given kind of item. Under MYP, DOD instead uses a single contract for two to five years’ worth of procurement of a given kind of item, without having to exercise a contract option for each year after the first year. DOD needs congressional approval for each use of MYP. To illustrate the basic difference between MYP and annual contracting, consider a hypothetical DOD program to procure 20 single-engine aircraft of a certain kind over the five-year period FY2015-FY2019, at a rate of four aircraft per year: • Under annual contracting, DOD would issue one or more contracts for each year’s procurement of four aircraft. After Congress funds the procurement of the first four aircraft in FY2015, DOD would issue one or more contracts (or exercise a contract option) for those four aircraft. The next year, after Congress funds the procurement of the next four aircraft in FY2015, DOD would issue one or more contracts (or exercise a contract option) for those four aircraft, and so on. • Under MYP, DOD would issue one contract covering all 20 aircraft to be procured during the five-year period FY2015-FY2019. DOD would award this contract in FY2015, at the beginning of the five-year period, following congressional approval to use MYP for the program, and congressional appropriation of the FY2015 funding for the program. To continue the implementation of the contract over the next four years, DOD would request the FY2016 funding for the program as part of DOD’s proposed FY2016 budget, the FY2017 funding as part of DOD’s proposed FY2017 budget, and so on. Potential Savings Under MYP How much can MYP save? Compared with estimated costs under annual contracting, estimated savings for programs being proposed for MYP have ranged from less than 5% to more than 15%, depending on the particulars of the program in question, with many estimates falling in the range of 5% to 10%. In practice, actual savings from using MYP rather than annual contracting can be difficult to observe or verify because of cost growth during the execution of the contract that was caused by developments independent of the use of MYP rather than annual contracting. A February 2012 briefing by the Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE) office within the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) states that “MYP savings analysis is difficult due to the lack of actual costs on the alternative acquisition path, i.e., the path not taken.”5 The briefing states that CAPE up to that point had assessed MYP savings for four aircraft procurement programs—F/A-18E/F strike fighters, H-60 helicopters, V-22 tilt-rotor aircraft, and CH-47F helicopters—and that CAPE’s assessed savings ranged from 2% to 8%.6 A 2008 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report stated that 5 Slide 10 from briefing entitled “Multiyear Procurement: A CAPE Perspective,” given at DOD cost analysis symposium, February 15-17, 2012, posted at InsideDefense.com (subscription required) May 14, 2012. 6 Slide 12 from briefing entitled “Multiyear Procurement: A CAPE Perspective,” given at DOD cost analysis symposium, February 15-17, 2012, posted at InsideDefense.com (subscription required) May 14, 2012. Slide 12 also stated that these assessed savings were based on comparing CAPE’s estimate of what the programs would cost under annual contracting (which the briefing refers to as single-year procurement or SYP) to the contractor’s MYP proposal. Congressional Research Service 3 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition DOD does not have a formal mechanism for tracking multiyear results against original expectations and makes few efforts to validate whether actual savings were achieved by multiyear procurement. It does not maintain comprehensive central records and historical information that could be used to enhance oversight and knowledge about multiyear performance to inform and improve future multiyear procurement (MYP) candidates. DOD and defense research centers officials said it is difficult to assess results because of the lack of historical information on multiyear contracts, comparable annual costs, and the dynamic acquisition environment.7 How does MYP potentially save money? Compared to annual contracting, using MYP can in principle reduce the cost of the weapons being procured in two primary ways: • Contractor optimization of workforce and production facilities. An MYP contract gives the contractor (e.g., an airplane manufacturer or shipbuilder) confidence that a multiyear stream of business of a known volume will very likely materialize. This confidence can permit the contractor to make investments in the firm’s workforce and production facilities that are intended to optimize the facility for the production of the items being procured under the contract. Such investments can include payments for retaining or training workers, or for building, expanding, or modernizing production facilities. Under annual contracting, the manufacturer might not have enough confidence about its future stream of business to make these kinds of investments, or might be unable to convince its parent firm to finance them. • Economic order quantity (EOQ) purchases of selected long-leadtime components. Under an MYP contract, DOD is permitted to bring forward selected key components of the items to be procured under the contract and to purchase the components in batch form during the first year or two of the contract. In the hypothetical example introduced earlier, using MYP could permit DOD to purchase, say, the 20 engines for the 20 aircraft in the first year or two of the five-year contract. Procuring selected components in this manner under an MYP contract is called an economic order quantity (EOQ) purchase.8 EOQ purchases can reduce the procurement cost of the weapons being procured under the MYP contract by allowing the manufacturers of components to take maximum advantage of production economies of scale that are possible with batch orders.9 7 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] DOD’s Practices and Processes for Multiyear Procurement Should Be Improved, GAO-08-298, February 2008, p. 3. 8 The term EOQ is occasionally used in discussions of defense acquisition, somewhat loosely, to refer to any highquantity or batch order of items, even those that do not take place under MYP or BBC. As a general matter, however, EOQs as described here occur only within MYP and block buy contracts. 9 A 2008 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report on multiyear contracting lists five areas of savings, most of which are covered in the two general areas of savings outlined above. One of GAO’s five areas of savings—limited engineering changes due to design stability—can also occur in programs that use annual contracting. The GAO report states: Multiyear procurement can potentially save money and improve the defense industrial base by permitting the more efficient use of a contractor’s resources. Multiyear contracts are expected to achieve lower unit costs compared to annual contracts through one or more of the following sources: (1) purchase of parts and materials in economic order quantities (EOQ), (2) improved production processes and efficiencies, (3) better utilized industrial facilities, (4) limited engineering changes due to design stability during the multiyear period, and (5) cost avoidance by reducing the (continued...) Congressional Research Service 4 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition What gives the contractor confidence that the multiyear stream of business will materialize? At least two things give the contractor confidence that DOD will not terminate an MYP contract and that the multiyear stream of business consequently will materialize: • For a program to qualify for MYP, DOD must certify, among other things, that the minimum need for the items to be purchased is expected to remain substantially unchanged during the contract in terms of production rate, procurement rate, and total quantities. • Perhaps more important to the contractor, MYP contracts include a cancellation penalty intended to reimburse a contractor for costs that the contractor has incurred (i.e., investments the contractor has made) in anticipation of the work covered under the MYP contract. The undesirability of paying a cancellation penalty acts as a disincentive for the government against canceling the contract. (And if the contract is canceled, the cancellation penalty helps to make the contractor whole.)10 Permanent Statute Governing MYP Is there a permanent statute governing MYP contracting? There is a permanent statute governing MYP contracting—10 U.S.C. 2306b. The statute was created by Section 909 of the FY1982 Department of Defense Authorization Act (S. 815/P.L. 97-86 of December 1, 1981), revised and reorganized by Section 1022 of the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994 (S. 1587/P.L. 103-355 of October 13, 1994), and further amended on several occasions since. DOD’s use of MYP contracting is further governed by DOD acquisition regulations. Under this statute, what criteria must a program meet to qualify for MYP? 10 U.S.C. 2306b(a) states that to qualify for MYP, a program must meet several criteria, including the following. • Substantial savings. DOD must estimate that using an MYP contract would result in “substantial savings” compared with using annual contracting. • Realistic cost estimates. DOD’s estimates of the cost of the MYP contract and the anticipated savings must be realistic. • Stable need for the items. DOD must expect that its minimum need for the items will remain substantially unchanged during the contract in terms of production rate, procurement rate, and total quantities. (...continued) burden of placing and administering annual contracts. Multiyear procurement also offers opportunities to enhance the industrial base by providing defense contractors a longer and more stable time horizon for planning and investing in production and by attracting subcontractors, vendors, and suppliers. However, multiyear procurement also entails certain risks that must be balanced against potential benefits, such as the increased costs to the government should the multiyear contract be changed or canceled and decreased annual budget flexibility for the program and across DOD’s portfolio of weapon systems. Additionally, multiyear contracts often require greater budgetary authority in the earlier years of the procurement to economically buy parts and materials for multiple years of production than under a series of annual buys. Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] DOD’s Practices and Processes for Multiyear Procurement Should Be Improved, GAO-08-298, February 2008, pp. 4-5. 10 Annual contracts can also include cancellation penalties. Congressional Research Service 5 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition • Stable design for the items. The design for the items to be acquired must be stable, and the technical risks associated with the items must not be excessive. Section 811 of the FY2008 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4986/P.L. 110-181 of January 28, 2008) amended 10 U.S.C. 2306b to require the Secretary of Defense to certify in writing, by no later than March 1 of the year in which DOD requests MYP authority for a program, that these and certain other criteria have been met. It also requires that the Secretary provide the congressional defense committees with the basis for this determination, as well as a cost analysis performed by DOD’s office of Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE) that supports the findings.11 Section 811 further amended 10 U.S.C. 2306b to require the following: • Sufficient prior deliveries to determine whether estimated unit costs are realistic. A sufficient number of the type of item to be acquired under the proposed MYP contract must have been delivered under previous contracts at or within the most current estimates of the program acquisition unit cost or procurement unit cost to determine whether current estimates of such unit costs are realistic. • No Nunn-McCurdy critical cost growth breaches within the last five years. The system being proposed for an MYP contract must not have experienced within five years of the anticipated award date of the MYP contract a critical cost growth breach as defined under the Nunn-McCurdy act (10 U.S.C. 2433).12 • Fixed-price type contract. The proposed MYP contract must be a fixed-price type contract. What is meant by “substantial savings”? The meaning of “substantial savings” is open to interpretation and might depend on the circumstances of the program in question. In practice, estimated savings of at least 5% might be judged substantial, and estimated savings in the range of 10% (or more) are more likely to be judged substantial. The amount of savings required under 10 U.S.C. 2306b to qualify has changed over time; the requirement for “substantial savings” was established by Section 808(a)(2) of the FY1991 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4739/P.L. 101-510 of November 5, 1990), which amended 10 U.S.C. 2306b in this regard.13 What is meant by “stable design”? The term “stable design” is generally understood to mean that the design for the items to be procured is not expected to change substantially during the period of the contract. Having a stable design is generally demonstrated by having already built at least a few items to that design (or in the case of a shipbuilding program, at least one ship to that design) and concluding, through testing and operation of those items, that the design does not require any substantial changes during the period of the contract. 11 §811 states that the cost analysis is to be performed by DOD’s Cost Analysis Improvement Group (CAIG). In a subsequent DOD reorganization, CAIG was made part of CAPE. 12 For more on the Nunn-McCurdy provision, see CRS Report R41293, The Nunn-McCurdy Act: Background, Analysis, and Issues for Congress, by Moshe Schwartz. 13 For a discussion of the evolution of the savings requirement under 10 U.S.C. 2306b, including a figure graphically summarizing the legislative history of the requirement, see Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] DOD’s Practices and Processes for Multiyear Procurement Should Be Improved, GAO-08-298, February 2008, pp. 2122, including Figure 3 on p. 22. Congressional Research Service 6 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Potential Consequences of Not Fully Funding an MYP Contract What happens if Congress does not provide the annual funding requested by DOD to continue the implementation of the contract? If Congress does not provide the funding requested by DOD to continue the implementation of an MYP contract, DOD would be required to renegotiate, suspend, or terminate the contract. Terminating the contract could require the government to pay a cancellation penalty to the contractor. Renegotiating or suspending the contract could also have a financial impact. Effect on Flexibility for Making Procurement Changes What effect does using MYP have on flexibility for making procurement changes? A principal potential disadvantage of using MYP is that it can reduce Congress’s and DOD’s flexibility for making changes (especially reductions) in procurement programs in future years in response to changing strategic or budgetary circumstances, at least without incurring cancellation penalties. In general, the greater the portion of DOD’s procurement account that is executed under MYP contracts, the greater the potential loss of flexibility. The use of MYP for executing some portion of the DOD procurement account means that if policy makers in future years decide to reduce procurement spending below previously planned levels, the spending reduction might fall more heavily on procurement programs that do not use MYP, which in turn might result in a less-thanoptimally balanced DOD procurement effort. Congressional Approval How does Congress approve the use of MYP? Congress approves the use of MYP on a case-bycase basis, typically in response to requests by DOD.14 Congressional approval for MYP contracts with a value of more than $500 million must occur in two places: an annual DOD appropriations act15 and an act other than the annual DOD appropriations act.16 In annual DOD appropriations acts, the provision permitting the use of MYP for one or more defense acquisition programs is typically included in the title containing general provisions, which typically is Title VIII. An annual defense authorization act is usually the act other than an appropriations act in which provisions granting authority for using MYP contracting on individual defense acquisition programs are included. Such provisions typically occur in Title I of the defense authorization act, the title covering procurement programs. 14 The Anti-Deficiency Act (31 U.S.C. 1341) prohibits the making of contracts in advance of appropriations. A multiple-year commitment may be made when authorized by Congress by entering into a firm commitment for one year and making the government’s liability for future years contingent on funds becoming available. 15 Paragraph (3) of subsection (l) of 10 U.S.C. 2306b states, “The head of an agency may not initiate a multiyear procurement contract for any system (or component thereof) if the value of the multiyear contract would exceed $500,000,000 unless authority for the contract is specifically provided in an appropriations Act.” 16 Paragraph (3) of subsection (i) of 10 U.S.C. 2306b states, “In the case of the Department of Defense, a multiyear contract in an amount equal to or greater than $500,000,000 may not be entered into for any fiscal year under this section unless the contract is specifically authorized by law in an Act other than an appropriations Act.” Congressional Research Service 7 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Provisions in which Congress approves the use of MYP for a particular defense acquisition program may include specific conditions for that program in addition to the requirements and conditions of 10 U.S.C. 2306b. How often is MYP used? MYP is used for a limited number of DOD acquisition programs. As shown in the Appendix, annual DOD appropriations acts since FY1990 typically have approved the use of MYP for one or a few DOD programs each year. A February 2012 briefing by the Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation (CAPE) office within the Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD) shows that the total dollar value of DOD MYP contracts has remained more or less stable between FY2000 and FY2012 at roughly $7 billion to $13 billion per year. The briefing shows that since the total size of DOD’s procurement budget has increased during this period, the portion of DOD’s total procurement budget accounted for by programs using MYP contracts has declined from about 17% in FY2000 to less than 8% in FY2012.17 The briefing also shows that the Navy makes more use of MYP contracts than does the Army or Air Force, and that the Air Force made very little use of MYP in FY2010-FY2012.18 A 2008 Government Accountability Office (GAO) report stated: Although DOD had been entering into multiyear contracts on a limited basis prior to the 1980s, the Department of Defense Authorization Act, [for fiscal year] 1982,19 codified the authority for DOD to procure on a multiyear basis major weapon systems that meet certain criteria. Since that time, DOD has annually submitted various weapon systems as multiyear procurement candidates for congressional authorization. Over the past 25 years, Congress has authorized the use of multiyear procurement for approximately 140 acquisition programs, including some systems approved more than once.20 In an interview published on January 13, 2014, Sean Stackley, the Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Research, Development, and Acquisition (i.e., the Navy’s acquisition executive), stated: What the industrial base clamors for is stability, so they can plan, invest, train their work force. It gives them the ability in working with say, the Street [Wall Street], to better predict their own performance, then meet expectations in the same fashion we try to meet our expectations with the Hill. It’s emblematic of stability that we’ve got more multiyear programs in the Department of the Navy than the rest of the Department of Defense combined. We’ve been able to harvest from that significant savings, and that has been key to solving some of our budget problems. It’s allowed us in certain cases to put the savings right back into other programs tied to requirements.21 17 Slide 4 from briefing entitled “Multiyear Procurement: A CAPE Perspective,” given at DOD cost analysis symposium, February 15-17, 2012, posted at InsideDefense.com (subscription required) May 14, 2012. 18 Slide 5 from briefing entitled “Multiyear Procurement: A CAPE Perspective,” given at DOD cost analysis symposium, February 15-17, 2012, posted at InsideDefense.com (subscription required) May 14, 2012. 19 S. 815/P.L. 97-86 of December 1, 1981, §909. 20 Government Accountability Office, Defense Acquisitions[:] DOD’s Practices and Processes for Multiyear Procurement Should Be Improved, GAO-08-298, February 2008, p. 5. 21 “Interview: Sean Stackley, US Navy’s Acquisition Chief,” Defense News, January 13, 2014: 22. Congressional Research Service 8 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Block Buy Contracting (BBC) BBC in Brief What is BBC, and how does it compare to MYP? BBC is similar to MYP in that it permits DOD to use a single contract for more than one year’s worth of procurement of a given kind of item without having to exercise a contract option for each year after the first year.22 BBC is also similar to MYP in that DOD needs congressional approval for each use of BBC. BBC differs from MYP in the following ways: • There is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC. • There is no requirement that BBC be approved in both a DOD appropriations act and an act other than a DOD appropriations act. • Programs being considered for BBC do not need to meet any legal criteria to qualify for BBC because there is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC that establishes such criteria. • A BBC contract can cover more than five years of planned procurements. The BBC contracts currently being used by the Navy for procuring Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs), for example, cover a period of six years (FY2010-FY2015). • Economic order quantity (EOQ) authority does not come automatically as part of BBC authority because there is no permanent statute governing the use of BBC that includes EOQ authority as an automatic feature. To provide EOQ authority as part of a BBC contract, the provision granting authority for using BBC in a program may need to state explicitly that the authority to use BBC includes the authority to use EOQ. • BBC contracts are less likely to include cancellation penalties. Given the one key similarity between BBC and MYP (the use of a single contract for more than one year’s worth of procurement), and the various differences between BBC and MYP, BBC might be thought of as a less formal stepchild of MYP. When and why was BBC invented? BBC was invented by Section 121(b) of the FY1998 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 1119/P.L. 105-85 of November 18, 1997), which granted the Navy the authority to use a single contract for the procurement of the first four Virginia (SSN-774) class attack submarines. The four boats were scheduled to be procured during the five-year period FY1998-FY2002 in annual quantities of 1-1-0-1-1. Congress provided the authority granted in Section 121(b) at least in part to reduce the combined procurement cost of the four submarines. Using MYP was not an option for the Virginia-class program at that time 22 Using the hypothetical example introduced earlier involving the procurement of 20 aircraft over the five-year period FY2013-FY2017, DOD would follow the same general path as it would under MYP: DOD would issue one contract covering all 20 aircraft in FY2013, at the beginning of the five-year period, following congressional approval to use BBC for the program, and congressional appropriation of the FY2013 funding for the program. To continue the implementation of the contract over the next four years, DOD would request the FY2014 funding for the program as part of DOD’s proposed FY2014 budget, the FY2015 funding as part of DOD’s proposed FY2015 budget, and so on. Congressional Research Service 9 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition because the Navy had not even begun, let alone finished, construction of the first Virginia-class submarine, and consequently could not demonstrate that it had a stable design for the program. When Section 121(b) was enacted, there was no name for the contracting authority it provided. The term block buy contracting came into use later, when observers needed a term to refer to the kind of contracting authority that Congress authorized in Section 121(b). As discussed in the next section, this can cause confusion, because the term block buy was already being used in discussions of DOD acquisition to refer to something else. Terminology Alert: Block Buy Contracting vs. Block Buys What’s the difference between block buy contacting and block buys? In discussions of defense procurement, the term “block buy” by itself (without “contracting” at the end) is sometimes used to refer to something quite different from block buy contracting—namely, the simple act of funding the procurement of more than one copy of an item in a single year, particularly when no more than one item of that kind might normally be funded in a single year. For example, when Congress funded the procurement of two aircraft carriers in FY1983, and another two in FY1988, these acts were each referred to as block buys, because aircraft carriers are normally procured one at a time, several years apart from one another. This alternate meaning of the term block buy predates by many years the emergence of the term block buy contracting. The term block buy is still used in this alternate manner, which can lead to confusion in discussions of defense procurement. For example, for FY2014, the Air Force is requesting continued procurement funding for two Advanced Extremely High Frequency (AEHF) satellites that were procured in FY2012 and partially funded in FY2012 and FY2013. (An alternative approach would have been to procure one of the satellites in FY2012 and another in a subsequent year.) The Air Force is referring to this two-satellite procurement as a block buy—which it is, under the older use of the term. But it is not an example of block buy contracting. At the same time, Navy officials sometimes refer to the use of block buy contracts for the first four Virginia-class submarines, and currently in the LCS program, as block buys, when they might be more specifically referred to as instances of block buy contracting. Potential Savings Under BBC How much can BBC save, compared with MYP? Potential savings under BBC can be less than those under MYP, for at least two reasons: • The authority to use BBC might not include authority to use EOQ purchasing, which, as discussed earlier (see “Potential Savings Under MYP”), is one of the two principal sources of savings under an MYP contract. The block buy contract for the first four Virginia-class boats and the current block buy contracts for the LCS program do not include authority for EOQ purchasing. • A BBC contract might not include a cancellation penalty (or might include a more limited one). This can give the contractor less confidence than would be the case under an MYP contract that the future stream of business will materialize as planned, which in turn might reduce the amount of money the contractor invests to optimize its workforce and production facilities for producing the items to be procured under the contract. Congressional Research Service 10 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Frequency of Use of BBC How frequently has BBC been used? Since its use at the start of the Virginia-class program, BBC has been used very rarely. The Navy did not use it again in a shipbuilding program until December 2010, when it awarded two block buy contracts, each covering 10 LCSs to be procured over the six-year period FY2010-FY2015, to the two LCS builders.23 Using BBC Rather than MYP When might BBC be suitable as an alternative to MYP? BBC might be particularly suitable as an alternative to MYP in cases where using a multiyear contract can reduce costs, but the program in question cannot meet all the statutory criteria needed to qualify for MYP. As shown in the case of the first four Virginia-class boats, this can occur at or near the start of a procurement program, when design stability has not been demonstrated through the production of at least a few of the items to be procured (or, for a shipbuilding program, at least one ship). MYP and BBC vs. Contracts with Options What’s the difference between an MYP or block buy contract and a contract with options? The military services sometimes use contracts with options to procure multiple copies of an item that are procured over a period of several years. The Navy, for example, used a contract with options to procure Lewis and Clark (TAKE-1) class dry cargo ships that were procured over a period of several years. A contract with options can be viewed as somewhat similar to an MYP or block buy contract in that a single contract is used to procure several years’ worth of procurement of a given kind of item. There is, however, a key difference between an MYP or block buy contract and a contract with options: In a contract with options, the service is under no obligation to exercise any of the options, and a service can choose to not exercise an option without having to make a penalty payment to the contractor. In contrast, in an MYP or block buy contract, the service is under an obligation to continue implementing the contract beyond the first year, provided that Congress appropriates the necessary funds. If the service chooses to terminate an MYP or block buy contract, and does so as a termination for government convenience rather than as a termination for contractor default, then the contractor can, under the contract’s termination for convenience clause, seek a payment from the government for cost incurred for work that is complete or in process at the time of termination, and may include the cost of some of the investments made in anticipation of the MYP or block buy contract being fully implemented. The contractor can do this even if the MYP or block buy contract does not elsewhere include a provision for a cancellation penalty.24 23 For further discussion, see CRS Report RL33741, Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. 24 Source: Telephone discussion with Elliott Branch, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Acquisition & Procurement, October 3, 2011, and email from Navy Office of legislative Affairs, October 11, 2011. Under the termination for convenience clause, the contractor can submit a settlement proposal to the service, which would become the basis for a negotiation between the contractor and the service on the amount of the payment. Congressional Research Service 11 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Issues for Congress Potential issues for Congress concerning MYP and BBC include whether to use MYP and BBC in the future more frequently, less frequently, or about as frequently as they are currently used; and whether to create a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC, analogous to the permanent statute that governs the use of MYP. Frequency of Using MYP and BBC Should MYP and BBC in the future be used more frequently, less frequently, or about as frequently as they are currently used? Supporters of using MYP and BBC more frequently in the future might argue the following: • Since MYP and BBC can reduce procurement costs, making greater use of MYP and BBC can help DOD get more value out of its available procurement funding. This can be particularly important if DOD’s budget in real (i.e., inflationadjusted) terms remains flat or declines in coming years, as many observers anticipate. • The risks of using MYP have been reduced by Section 811 of the FY2008 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4986/P.L. 110-181 of January 28, 2008), which amended 10 U.S.C. 2306b to strengthen the process for ensuring that programs proposed for MYP meet certain criteria (see “Permanent Statute Governing MYP”). Since the value of MYP contracts equated to less than 8% of DOD’s procurement budget in FY2012, compared to about 17% of DOD’s procurement budget in FY2000, MYP likely could be used more frequently without exceeding past experience regarding the share of DOD’s procurement budget accounted for by MYP contracts. Supporters of using MYP and BBC less frequently in the future, or at least no more frequently than now, might argue the following: • Using MYP and BBC more frequently would further reduce Congress’s and DOD’s flexibility for making changes in DOD procurement programs in future years in response to changing strategic or budgetary circumstances. The risks of reducing flexibility in this regard are increased now because of uncertainties in the current strategic environment and because efforts to reduce federal budget deficits could include reducing DOD spending, which could lead to a reassessment of U.S. defense strategy and associated DOD acquisition programs. • Since actual savings from using MYP and BBC rather than annual contracting can be difficult to observe or verify, it is not clear that the financial benefits of using MYP or BBC more frequently in the future would be worth the resulting further reduction in Congress’s and DOD’s flexibility for making changes in procurement programs in future years in response to changing strategic or budgetary circumstances. Congressional Research Service 12 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Permanent Statute for BBC Should Congress create a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC, analogous to the permanent statute (10 U.S.C. 2306b) that governs the use of MYP? Supporters of creating a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC might argue the following: • Such a statute could encourage greater use of BBC, and thereby increase savings in DOD procurement programs by giving BBC contracting a formal legal standing and by establishing a clear process for DOD program managers to use in assessing whether their programs might be considered suitable for BBC. • Such a statute could make BBC more advantageous by including a provision that automatically grants EOQ authority to programs using BBC, as well as provisions establishing qualifying criteria and other conditions intended to reduce the risks of using BBC. Opponents of creating a permanent statute to govern the use of BBC might argue the following: • A key advantage of BBC is that it is not governed by a permanent statute. The lack of such a statute gives DOD and Congress full flexibility in determining when and how to use BBC for programs that may not qualify for MYP, but for which a multiyear contract of some kind might produce substantial savings. • Such a statute could encourage DOD program managers to pursue their programs using BBC rather than MYP. This could reduce discipline in DOD multiyear contracting if the qualifying criteria in the BBC statute are less demanding than the qualifying criteria in 10 U.S.C. 2306b. FY2015 Budget Submission Proposals That Could Affect Existing MYP and BBC Contracts Navy Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs) in FY2015 As part of its proposed FY2015 budget, the Navy is requesting funding for the procurement of three Littoral Combat Ships (LCSs), rather than four LCSs, as called for under the two LCS block buy contracts, which cover fiscal years FY2010-FY2015 and call two LCSs for each of the two LCS builders in FY2015. If three rather than four LCSs are procured in FY2015, one of the two LCS block buy contracts would not be completely fulfilled in FY2015, the final year of the contract. MH-60R Helicopters In testimony this year, the Navy has stated that if three LCSs are funded in FY2015, the Navy will seek to renegotiate one of the two block buy contracts so that the fourth LCS that was previously planned for FY2015 can instead be procured in FY2016.25 25 For further discussion, see CRS Report RL33741, Navy Littoral Combat Ship (LCS) Program: Background and Issues for Congress, by Ronald O'Rourke. Congressional Research Service 13 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Navy MH-60R Helicopters in FY2016 The Navy’s FY2015 budget submission projects a request for no MH-60R helicopters in FY2016, as opposed to 29 MH-60Rs in FY2016, as called for under two Army-Navy MYP contracts—one for H-60 helicopter air frames, and one for H-60 mission avionics and common cockpit—that cover fiscal years FY2012-FY2016. If no MH-60R helicopters are procured in FY2016, the government would need to terminate these two MYP contracts in their final year. The Chief of Naval Operations testified in March 2014 that the cost of terminating the contracts would be about the same for the Navy as the cost of procuring the aircraft.26 A subsequent estimate is that the cost to the government would be about $250 million.27 An April 9, 2014, press report states: Sikorsky Aircraft said on Wednesday [April 9] the U.S. Navy’s plan to skip orders for 29 MH-60 helicopters in the final year of a five-year contract could undermine the industry’s willingness to sign such cost-saving agreements in the future. Any move by the Navy to “break” the agreement in fiscal 2016 could also raise the cost of 60 U.S. Army Black Hawk helicopters included in the deal, Tim Healy, director of maritime programs for Sikorsky, a unit of United Technologies Corp, said at the annual Navy League conference. “This is not a legal issue. This is a confidence issue,” Healy said. “If multiyear contracts are negotiated and then not followed through ... industry is back to making year-to-year calculations and investments because you never know when the next year’s contract is going to be canceled.” Sikorsky signed an $8.5 billion contract with the Army and Navy in July 2012 to buy 653 Black Hawk and Seahawk helicopters through December 2017, a deal that generated significant discounts given the large size of the order. Navy Captain Jim Glass, program manager for the H-60 helicopters, told reporters he believed this would be the first time the Pentagon has reneged on a multiyear pact with industry.... Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin last month said the Navy’s decision to breach the Sikorsky agreement would trigger termination fees of at least $250 million. Both Healy and Glass said it was difficult to determine the financial effect, or any termination fees, since it remained unclear how the cuts would be implemented. But Healy said breaking the multiyear agreement would have other far-reaching consequences for the U.S. Department of Defense’s ability to reach such deals in the future. 26 See Lara Seligman, “CNO: Seahawk Buy Tied To CVN-73 Fate, Aircraft Cut Would Yield No Savings,” Inside the Navy, March 17, 2014; Jen DiMascio and Michael Fabey, “U.S. Navy Truncates Multiyear MH-60R Purchase,” Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, March 14, 2014: 1-2. 27 Andrea Shalal, “US Navy’s Sikorsky Helicopters Cancellation Would Cost Government $250 mln—Levin,” Reuters.com, March 27, 2014. Congressional Research Service 14 Congressional Research Service 13 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition about the same for the Navy as the cost of procuring the aircraft.25 A March 12, 2014, press report states: The Pentagon has indicated it might have to break its multiyear contract with Sikorsky in 2016 and cease buying more of the Navy’s MH-60 Seahawk helicopters. Obviously, Sikorsky’s not happy about this, but it also raises questions about whether companies will continue to trust DoD on multiyear contracts, where lower prices are offered due to the the [sic] built-in promise of a bigger buy. “The extremely competitive pricing that our customer received on that program was built around specific quantities,” Samir Mehta, president of defense systems and services at Sikorsky, said at a luncheon yesterday with reporters. The Pentagon’s decision “kind of undermines the confidence in the entire industry associated with multiyears… Something like this could lead us back to the days of single year pricing, which doesn’t always offer the best value to the government.”26 Legislative Activity for FY2015 DOD’s proposed FY2015 budget was submitted to Congress on March 4, 2014. 25 See Lara Seligman, “CNO: Seahawk Buy Tied To CVN-73 Fate, Aircraft Cut Would Yield No Savings,” Inside the Navy, March 17, 2014; Jen DiMascio and Michael Fabey, “U.S. Navy Truncates Multiyear MH-60R Purchase,” Aerospace Daily & Defense Report, March 14, 2014: 1-2. 26 Kate Brannen with Jonathan Topaz and Austin Wright, “Could Industry Lose Confidence In Multiyear Contracts?” Politico Pro Defense Morning Defense, March 12, 2014. An additional program to note is the E-2D airborne early warning aircraft program. The Navy’s FY2015 budget submission includes a total 20 E-2D airborne early warning aircraft in FY2015-FY2018, as opposed to 27 E-2Ds projected for these years under the Navy’s FY2014 budget submission. This reduction in planned E-2D procurement quantities will increase E-2D unit procurement costs under the anticipated MYP contract for the E-2D program, which is to cover the fiscal years FY2014-FY2018. (See Olga Belogolova, “Additional E-2D In OGSI Would Reduce Cost In Multiyear Procurement,” Inside the Navy, March 17, 2014.) It will not, however, compel the termination of the contract, because the contract was not yet signed when the FY2015 budget was submitted, and is being negotiated to accommodate the FY2015 submission’s proposed reduction in planned procurement quantities. (Source: Navy Office of Legislative Affairs, telephone conversation and email, April 1, 2014.) Congressional Research Service 14The fiscal 2015 budget preserved the multiyear contract for now, Glass said, and included $107 million in advanced procurement funding to ensure production could begin as planned.28 An April 14, 2014, press report states: The US Navy, in its fiscal 2015 budget proposal, said it wants to cancel a planned buy of 29 MH-60R Seahawk helicopters in 2016. The service’s reasoning is fairly simple: The Navy is considering retiring the aircraft carrier George Washington due to defense spending cuts. Retiring a carrier means one less carrier air wing—which includes MH-60Rs. But a major hurdle lies in the helicopter cancellation: The Pentagon signed a multiyear procurement deal with Sikorsky Aircraft and Lockheed Martin—makers of the helicopter— for those 29 machines, meaning the costs associated with terminating the contract could end up being higher than the purchase price, according to Defense Department and industry officials. The cancellation also could hurt the US Army, which is acquiring UH-60M Black Hawk and HH-60M medical evacuation helicopters through the same multiyear procurement deal. The Pentagon signed the $8.5 billion deal with Sikorsky for at least 653 helicopters in June 2012. Deliveries run through 2017. The deal included options for 263 more helicopters. Moreover, it could set a bad precedent that makes contractors wary of inking multiyear procurements, which have saved the Pentagon significant money in acquisition costs over the years. “The biggest change I think—which is troublesome—is I think this would be the first multiyear in the history of the US government to be broken,” said Scott Starrett, vice president of government business development for Sikorsky.29 An April 15, 2014, press report stated: 28 Andrea Shalal, “U.S. Navy Move to ‘Break’ Multiyear Deal Worries Industry—Sikorsky,” Reuters.com, April 9, 2014. First ellipse as in original. Similarly, a March 12, 2014, press report states: The Pentagon has indicated it might have to break its multiyear contract with Sikorsky in 2016 and cease buying more of the Navy’s MH-60 Seahawk helicopters. Obviously, Sikorsky’s not happy about this, but it also raises questions about whether companies will continue to trust DoD on multiyear contracts, where lower prices are offered due to the the [sic] built-in promise of a bigger buy. “The extremely competitive pricing that our customer received on that program was built around specific quantities,” Samir Mehta, president of defense systems and services at Sikorsky, said at a luncheon yesterday with reporters. The Pentagon’s decision “kind of undermines the confidence in the entire industry associated with multiyears… Something like this could lead us back to the days of single year pricing, which doesn’t always offer the best value to the government.” (Kate Brannen with Jonathan Topaz and Austin Wright, “Could Industry Lose Confidence In Multiyear Contracts?” Politico Pro Defense Morning Defense, March 12, 2014.) 29 Marcus Weisgerber, “Industry: Bad Precedent Set if DoD Cancels Multiyear Helo Buy,” DefenseNews.com, April 14, 2014. Congressional Research Service 15 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition The Pentagon will “look at options” so it does not break a multiyear helicopter contract with Sikorsky and Lockheed Martin that includes about 90 aircraft, a senior US Defense Department official said.... “We obviously don’t want to break the multiyear, so we’re going to look at options to try not to,” Frank Kendall, DoD undersecretary for acquisition, technology and logistics, told Defense News after a speech Tuesday [April 15] at a National Defense Industrial Association conference. Kendall noted that a decision on the multiyear contract is an issue for DoD’s 2016 budget.30 An April 22, 2014, press report states: Lockheed Martin Corp (LMT.N) warned on Tuesday that the U.S. Navy’s plan to cancel an order for 29 MH-60 helicopters built by Lockheed and Sikorsky Aircraft would result in large termination fees because they are part of five-year agreements signed in 2012. Lockheed Chief Financial Officer Bruce Tanner told reporters that work had already begun on cockpits and other equipment for the helicopters, which were to be ordered in fiscal year 2016, and a better option might be to finish building the aircraft and then sell them to allies. “That would probably be a better deal for the taxpayer than paying close to 100 percent and not getting anything for it,” he said. “The cost to terminate partially built helicopters is pretty significant relative to the cost to actually finish those helicopters.” Tanner did not provide details on the size of the expected termination fee if the Navy proceeds with its plan to “break” its five-year contracts with both Lockheed, which integrates the radars, cockpit and other equipment on the helicopters, and Sikorsky, the United Technologies Corp (UTX.N) unit which builds the aircraft.... U.S. Navy officials have said they are working closely with the companies and senior Pentagon leaders to understand the cost of cancelling the final 29 Navy helicopters covered by the agreements, but the process has not yet been completed.31 Legislative Activity for FY2015 FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act (H.R. 4435) House Section 121 of H.R. 4435 as reported by the House Armed Services Committee (H.Rept. 113-446 of May 13, 2014) provides MYP authority for the procurement of Tomahawk Block IV missiles for the Navy. The report also states that 30 Marcus Weisgerber, “DoD Looking for Ways Not To Break MH-60R Helicopter Deal,” DefenseNews.com, April 15, 2014. 31 Andrea Shalal, “Lockheed Says Costly for Pentagon If It Cancels MH-60 Helicopters,” Reuters,com, April 22, 2014. Congressional Research Service 16 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition ... the committee applauds the Army for its efforts to accelerate the Engineering Change Proposal (ECP) programs for the M1 Abrams tank, Bradley fighting vehicle and Stryker combat vehicle. The out-year funding reflected in the budget request for fiscal year 2015 indicates a commitment by the Army to move forward with the next major technology upgrades for the existing fleet of weapons systems that would ensure fielding of the highest quality combat vehicles to a smaller force and also sustain the fragile industrial base. However, the committee remains concerned about the stability of Army modernization funding in fiscal year 2016 and beyond given the implications of sequestration. The committee believes multiyear procurement contracts may reduce overall cost and help stabilize the industrial base and notes that there is precedent for successful Army combat vehicle multiyear procurements. Therefore, the committee encourages the Secretary of the Army, in accordance with section 2306b of title 10, United States Code, to request multiyear procurement authority in future budget requests for the Abrams ECP 1, Bradley ECP 2, and Stryker ECP 1 programs. (Page 15) Regarding Standard Missile 3 (SM-3) Block IB missiles for the Navy, the report states: The committee supports the funding requested in the budget submission for Advanced Procurement to support long-lead time requirements for these missiles. The committee also supports the likely request in the fiscal year 2016 budget request for multiyear procurement authority for these missile interceptors. The committee believes that a successful negotiation between the Missile Defense Agency and its contractors could drive down the per unit cost of these interceptors and increase the available quantities to the warfighter. (Page 312) Congressional Research Service 17 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Appendix. Programs Approved for MYP in Annual DOD Appropriations Acts Since FY1990 Table A-1. Programs Approved for MYP in Annual DOD Appropriations Acts Since FY1990 Fiscal Year Bill/Law Section on MYP Program(s) Approved for MYP 2014 H.R. 3547/P.L. 113-76 Section 8010 of Division C E-2D Advanced Hawkeye SSN 774 Virginia class submarine KC-130J, C-130J, HC-130J, MC-130J, AC-130J aircraft, and government-furnished equipment 2013 H.R. 933/P.L. 1136113-6 Section 8010 of Division C F/A-18E, F/A-18F, and EA-18G aircraft Up to 10 DDG-51 destroyers, as well as the AEGIS Weapon Systems, MK 41 Vertical Launching Systems, and Commercial Broadband Satellite Systems associated with those ships Virginia class submarines and government-furnished equipment CH-47 Chinook helicopters V-22 Osprey aircraft variants 2012 H.R. 2055/P.L. 112-74 Section 8010 of Division A UH–60M/HH–60M and MH–60R/MH–60S Helicopter Airframes MH–60R/S Mission Avionics and Common Cockpits 2011 H.R. 1473/P.L. 112-10 Section 8010 of Division A Navy MH-60R/S helicopter systems 2010 H.R. 3326/P.L. 111-118 Section 8011 of Division A F-18 aircraft variants 2009 H.R. 2638/P.L. 110-329 Section 8011 of Division C SSN Virginia class submarine 2008 H.R. 3222/P.L. 110-116 Section 8010 of Division A Army CH-47 Chinook helicopter M1A2 Abrams System Enhancement Package upgrades M2A3/M3A3 Bradley upgrades SSN Virginia Class submarine 2007 H.R. 5631/P.L. 109-289 Section 8008 of Division A C-17 Globemaster F-22A MH-60R Helicopters MH-60R Helicopter mission equipment V-22 Osprey 2006 H.R. 2863/P.L. 109-148 Section 8008 of Division A UH-60/MH-60 helicopters C-17 Globemaster Apache Block II Conversion Modernized Target Acquisition Designation Sight/Pilot Night Vision Sensor (MTADS/PNVS) Congressional Research Service 1518 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Fiscal Year Bill/Law Section on MYP Program(s) Approved for MYP 2005 H.R. 4613/P.L. 108-287 Section 8008 Lightweight 155mm Howitzer 2004 H.R. 2658/P.L. 108-87 Section 8008 F/A-18 aircraft E-2C aircraft Tactical Tomahawk missile Virginia Class submarine 2003 H.R. 5010/P.L. 107-248 Section 8008 C-130 aircraft FMTV F/A-18E and F engine 2002 H.R. 3338/P.L. 107-117 Section 8008 of Division A UH-60/CH-60 aircraft C-17 F/A-18E and F engine 2001 H.R. 4576/P.L. 106-259 Section 8008 Javelin missile M2A3 Bradley fighting vehicle DDG-51 destroyer UH-60/CH-60 aircraft 2000 H.R. 2561/P.L. 106-79 Section 8008 Longbow Apache helicopter Javelin missile Abrams M1A2 Upgrade F/A-18E/F aircraft C-17 aircraft F-16 aircraft 1999 H.R. 4103/P.L. 105-262 Section 8008 E-2C aircraft Longbow Hellfire missile Medium Tactical Vehicle Replacement (MTVR) 1998 H.R. 2266/P.L. 105-56 Section 8008 Apache Longbow radar AV-8B aircraft Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles 1997 H.R. 3610/P.L. 104-208 Section 8009 of Section 101(b) of Title I of Division A Javelin missiles Army Tactical Missile System (ATACMS) Mk19-3 grenade machine guns M16A2 rifles M249 Squad Automatic Weapons M4 carbine rifles M240B machine guns Arleigh Burke (DDG-15 [sic:51] class destroyers Congressional Research Service 1619 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Fiscal Year Bill/Law Section on MYP Program(s) Approved for MYP 1996 H.R. 2126/P.L. 104-61 Section 8010 UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter Apache Longbow helicopter M1A2 tank upgrade 1995 H.R. 4650/P.L. 103-335 Section 8010 MK19-3 grenade machine guns M16A2 rifles M249 Squad Automatic Weapons M4 carbine rifles 1994 H.R. 3116/P.L. 103-139 Section 8011 [none] 1993 H.R. 5504/P.L. 102-396 Section 9013a Defense Support Satellites 23, 24 and 25 Enhanced Modular Signal Processor 1992 H.R. 2521/P.L. 102-172 Section 8013 MK-48 ADCAP Torpedo UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter Army Tactical missile 1991 H.R. 5803/P.L. 101-511 Section 8014 Line of Sight-Rear (Avenger)—Pedestal Mounted Stinger Family of Medium Tactical Vehicles (FMTV) LCAC Landing Craft LHD Amphibious Ship MK-45 Gun Mount/MK-6 Ammo Hoist NAVSTAR Global Positioning Satellite (GPS) Defense Support Program Satellites 22 and 23 1990 H.R. 3072/P.L. 101-165 Section 9021a M-1 tank engines M-1 tank fire control Bradley Fighting Vehicle Family of Heavy Tactical Vehicles Maverick Missile (AGM-65D) SH-60B/F helicopter DDG-51 destroyer (two years) Source: Table prepared by CRS based on text of bills. a. In H.R. 5504/P.L. 102-396 and H.R. 3072/P.L. 101-165, the general provisions title was Title IX. Congressional Research Service 1720 Multiyear Procurement and Block Buy Contracting in Defense Acquisition Author Contact Information Ronald O'Rourke Specialist in Naval Affairs rorourke@crs.loc.gov, 7-7610 Congressional Research Service Moshe Schwartz Specialist in Defense Acquisition mschwartz@crs.loc.gov, 7-1463 1821