National Polar-Orbiting Op Env Satellite
Abstract
Presidential Decision Directive/National Science and Technology Council-2 (PDD/NCTC-2) (May 1994) directed the DoD, Department of Commerce (DOC), and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to establish a converged national polar-orbiting weather satellite program. The converged program, the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS), combined the follow-on to DoD’s Defense Meteorological Satellite System (DMSP) and the DOC’s Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite (POES) program. On 1 February 2010, the Executive Office of the President announced a restructure of the NPOESS program which directed the acquisition and development of separate military and civil weather satellite programs. The Air Force began acquisition of the Defense Weather Satellite System (DWSS) to satisfy military weather requirements. The National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) will acquire the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS) and a shared common ground system to address civil weather and environmental requirements. The DWSS system was designed to produce environmental data records for regional/global meteorological, oceanographic, environmental, climatic data, and space environmental remote sensing information. DWSS capabilities would enable the anticipation and exploitation of atmospheric and space environment conditions for military operations planning. DWSS data would also be instrumental to civilian weather forecasters as they work to improve climate forecasting and severe weather modeling and prediction, reducing the potential for loss of civilian life and property. The DWSS program was designed to satisfy DoD’s environmental monitoring requirements in the early morning orbit by developing and launching two satellites [flight-1 (F1) and flight-2 (F2)], each with an electro-optical sensor, Space Environment Monitor (SEM-N), and a microwave sensor, with a planned initial launch capability no earlier than 2018. RDT&E funds in FY 2011 were used for early development of the two DWSS satellites, contract restructure efforts, and continued transition of non-DoD payloads to NASA/NOAA for JPSS. RDT&E funds in FY 2012 were used to support DWSS program termination activities such as: leveraging and/or transitioning government investments in the NPOESS/DWSS program including electro-optical, microwave, and space weather sensors, spacecraft, materials, algorithms and other DoD-specific elements of the common ground system; acquiring if necessary, any intellectual property rights and data; storage of program assets for potential future use; and covering any contractor or government liabilities incurred while performing termination activities. FY 2012 funds were also used to complete the transition of non-DoD payloads and support to NOAA/NASA for the Joint Polar Satellite System (JPSS). BA-4 - This program is a Budget Activity 4, Advanced Component Development and Prototypes (ACP&P) because efforts are necessary to evaluate integrated technologies, representative modes or prototype systems in a high fidelity and realistic operating environment.
Document Details
- Document Type
- R2 Budgetary Justification
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 2013
- Source ID
- 0305178F_4_3600_PB_2013
- Change Summary Explanation
- The restructure from the National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) program to the Defense Weather Satellite System (DWSS) was finalized in FY 2011. The DWSS program was terminated per Congressional direction in FY 2012. DoD will utilize the remaining Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) satellites to satisfy DoD overhead weather requirements until a follow-on capability can be acquired. All FY 2012 activities in this PE supported DWSS program termination. Weather Satellite Follow-on activities (WSF) were funded starting in FY 2012 using a new PE (0604422F). FY11: -$225.5M congressional-directed reduction for program reduction; +$75M congressional add; -$0.898M congressional general reduction; -$1.091M SBIR FY12: $43M congressional add (DWSS termination liability) FY12: -$444.9M congressional directed reduction (DWSS program termination) FY13: -$526.785M removes FY13 DWSS funding and is reallocated to higher DoD priorities
- Service Agency Name
- Air Force
Entities
Organizations
- United States Air Force
Related Documents
- Child Project: National Polar-orbiting Operational Env. Sat. Syst.
- Child Accomplishment: DWSS
- Child Cost Item: 00e2cd866ee102a8532bd86d0485ebec
- Child Cost Item: 1f529e78bae124fbb8952bcfc89719ac
- Child Cost Item: 49beacd7d6757a450d6bd28fae61edf7
- Child Cost Item: cd1706eafdb9979bebaecf61ebb37b3d