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Articles
Top 6 Moderna Government Contracts Award
by Paula Marasigan
Published on January 31, 2023
Top 6 Moderna Government Contracts Award

Photo by Tada Images from Shutterstock.com

Moderna is one of the US government’s top pharmaceutical and biotechnology contractors. It quickly became a leader in creating novel mRNA technology and therapies for treating diseases and became successful in federal contracts. Since the COVID-19 epidemic, the company has taken the lead and won several significant contracts. Find more about the best Moderna government contracts here!

Table of Contents

  • 1. Moderna Clinched a Vaccine Development Contract for the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)
  • 2. Moderna to Produce 100 Million Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine
  • 3. Moderna to Produce an Additional 100 Million Doses of COVID-19
  • 4. SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccines for the US Army 
  • 5. COVID-19 Vaccine Production Contract with the United States Army
  • 6. Bivalent COVID-19 Booster Vaccine Supply
  • About Moderna Inc.

1. Moderna Clinched a Vaccine Development Contract for the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)

Vaccine Development Contract of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority

Photo by PKStockphoto from Shutterstock.com

  • Contracting Activity: Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA)
  • Value: $483 million
  • Contract type: Modification contract
  • Contract Date: April 2020

The Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority (BARDA) awarded Moderna a $483 million contract in April 2020 to expedite the development of the mRNA-1273 vaccine for COVID-19. The vaccine was developed clinically, advanced, and manufactured with BARDA funding from 2020 until the phase I clinical study and FDA licensure. Moderna hires roughly 150 new employees to speed up its production capabilities, control its scale-up procedure, and support its entire clinical development. BARDA’s total funding is recorded to be at about $955 million.

2. Moderna to Produce 100 Million Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine

Production of 100 Million Doses of COVID-19 Vaccine by Moderna

Photo by oasisamuel from Shutterstock.com

  • Contracting Activity: Health and Human Services Department
  • Value: $1.53 Billion
  • Contract type: Firm-fixed-price
  • Contract Date: August 2020

A deal for the production of 100 million doses of the COVID-19 mRNA vaccine was obtained by Moderna. Work began in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and was completed on March 31, 2022. Moderna was granted $1.53 billion in funding at the time of the award.

The Army Contracting Command requested an additional 100 million doses of the COVID-19 vaccination by July 31, 2021. The total worth of this additional contract is $1.65 million. Moderna was given a $3.3 billion contract to produce an additional 200 million dosages of the COVID-19 vaccine by March 31, 2022.

3. Moderna to Produce an Additional 100 Million Doses of COVID-19

Contract Amendment for an Additional 100 Million Doses of COVID-19

Photo by tunasalmon from Shutterstock.com

  • Contracting Activity: National Institutes of Health and the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority
  • Value: $1.97 Billion
  • Contract type: Contract modification
  • Contract Date: December 2020

ModernaUS Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, received a $1.97 billion modification to purchase 100 million filled drug manufacturing doses of SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccine using Option 1 and acetate work on the base and option. The company’s mRNA vaccines against COVID-19 will be produced under a six-month contract extension.

4. SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccines for the US Army 

SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccines

Photo by Aleksandar Malivuk from Shutterstock.com

  • Contracting Activity: United States Army Contracting Command
  • Value: $1.65 Billion
  • Contract type: Modification contract
  • Contract Date: February 2021

Moderna received a $1.65 billion modifications contract award from the United States in February 2021. The company commits 300 million SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 dosages, in addition to 100 million doses. The subsequent delivery batch, initially due in September to achieve the supply target, was set for July 2021.

5. COVID-19 Vaccine Production Contract with the United States Army

Vaccine Production Contract for Covid-19 Prevention

Photo from U.S. Army Official Website

  • Contracting Activity: United States Army Contracting Command
  • Value: $3.3 Billion
  • Contract type: Contract modification
  • Contract Date: June 2021

Moderna received a $3.3 billion contract award from the United States in June 2021.  As per the contract, Moderna needs to have produced 200 million doses of the double-shot SARS-CoV-2 mRNA-1273 vaccine by March 2022. The grant covered research, development, and testing for the vaccine.

The Biden administration’s objective to get at least 70% of American adults partly immunized by the first week of July was replaced with this campaign department.

6. Bivalent COVID-19 Booster Vaccine Supply

COVID-19 Booster Vaccine Supply of the United States Government

Photo by Wetzkaz Graphics from Shutterstock.com

  • Contracting Activity: United States Army Contracting Command
  • Value: $1.74 Billion
  • Contract type: Firm-fixed-price
  • Contract Date: July 2022

Moderna’s most recent deal with the U.S. government is a $1.74 billion contract awarded in July 2022 to develop and deliver 66 million doses of bivalent COVID-19 booster vaccine, getting supply ready for the upcoming winter.

The bivalent vaccination booster, known as mRNA-1273.222, contains the mRNA of the Omicron BA.4/5 strain as well as Spikevax. It targets the viral variety known as omicron, which has dominated the nation throughout December of the previous year. Future delivery to the government agreement is permitted up to 234 million doses under the contract details.

About Moderna Inc.

Moderna Inc. is a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based pharmaceutical company led by a team of dedicated Moderna leaders and executives whose expertise provides the groundwork for breakthroughs in mRNA science. Stéphane Bancel, CEO since October 2011, founded the company in 2010. With a reported revenue of $3.4 billion in the third quarter of 2022, Moderna is ranked 195th among the Fortune 500 businesses in 2022.

 

News
DOE Funds Development of Affordable, Clean Hydrogen Technologies; Jennifer Granholm Quoted
by Naomi Cooper
Published on January 30, 2023
DOE Funds Development of Affordable, Clean Hydrogen Technologies; Jennifer Granholm Quoted

The Department of Energy will award up to $47 million in funding to research projects aimed at advancing the development of technologies designed to produce hydrogen with zero or near-zero carbon emissions at affordable prices.

DOE said the funding program will select projects that will focus on improving hydrogen infrastructure, mitigating costs and boosting the performance of hydrogen fuel cells.

“This funding will advance cutting-edge research and drive down technology costs to help unlock the full potential of clean hydrogen energy—providing another valuable resource to combat the climate crisis while creating economic opportunities in communities across the country,” said Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm.

According to the department, the initiative will support an Energy Earthshot effort that seeks to reduce the cost of clean hydrogen to $1 per 1 kilogram within a decade.

The program will also focus on the delivery of durable fuel cell technologies for heavy-duty trucks to prevent tailpipe emissions.

News
AFNWC Begins Construction of Software Center for ICBM Program
by Naomi Cooper
Published on January 30, 2023
AFNWC Begins Construction of Software Center for ICBM Program

The Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center has held a groundbreaking ceremony at the site of its new Software Mission Assurance Center, which will house software development efforts in support of the LGM-35A Sentinel intercontinental ballistic missile program.

Located at Hill Air Force Base in Utah, the center will foster collaboration between government and contractor software developers to upgrade and build products using modern technologies and methods, the Air Force Materiel Command said last week.

AFNWC officials said the facility “will be the first-of-its-kind” and will maintain Sentinel’s modular architecture throughout its full lifecycle.

Sentinel, formerly known as the Ground Based Strategic Deterrent system, will replace the Minuteman III ICBM system to help modernize the land-based leg of the U.S. nuclear triad.

Northrop Grumman is currently building the weapon system under a potential $13.3 billion engineering and manufacturing development contract awarded in September 2020.

Government Technology/News
ITI Urges NTIA to Prioritize Cybersecurity, Commercialization in Awarding $1.5B Open RAN Innovation Fund
by Jamie Bennet
Published on January 30, 2023
ITI Urges NTIA to Prioritize Cybersecurity, Commercialization in Awarding $1.5B Open RAN Innovation Fund

The National Telecommunications and Information Administration should grant its Public Wireless Supply Chain Innovation Fund to projects focused on 5G and future generations of wireless networks, the Information Technology Industry Council said.

ITI published its comments on Friday in response to NTIA’s request for comment on funding open and interoperable radio access networks. The organization has $1.5 billion in its disposal through the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. 

Aside from bolstering the country’s global leadership in telecommunications, the 10-year grant program was also established to elevate small and medium-sized businesses vying for a share of the market.

According to ITI, NTIA should include cybersecurity proposals as one of the main prerequisites in grant funding, and give attention to pilot projects and commercial deployments when considering awardees.

The council also recommended that the administration promote open RAN technologies in both the domestic and international markets to support continuous industry growth.

Industry News/News
Pentagon Seeks to Advance Category Management Practices Adoption to Meet Small Business Goals
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 30, 2023
Pentagon Seeks to Advance Category Management Practices Adoption to Meet Small Business Goals

The Department of Defense’s office of the undersecretary for acquisition and sustainment has released a memorandum calling on DOD components to achieve small business objectives through the adoption of category management best practices.

According to the Friday-signed memo, category management practices and the implementation of the Tier 2 Spend Under Management credit could help encourage small disadvantaged businesses and other socioeconomic small businesses to take part in DOD procurement initiatives.

The Pentagon’s acquisition office stated that the use of best-in-class contracts should not hamper the ability of DOD components to meet socioeconomic small business goals.

The memo also informs DOD offices and agencies of their ability to secure an automatic Tier 2 SUM credit for all contract awards to socioeconomic small businesses.

“The credit can be applied towards small business set aside contracts to increase small business participation, which is now tracked under a new Tier 2-Socioeconomic Small Business category,” the memo reads. “This facilitates pursuit of the best acquisition strategy to maximize awards to socioeconomic small businesses.”

Earlier this month, DOD unveiled a strategy outlining three objectives to expand the department’s partnerships with small businesses as part of efforts to harness the full potential of the small business industrial base.

News/Space
Engineers Cite Comparable Values Between Pre-Flight Predictions & Actual Data from Space Launch System
by Jamie Bennet
Published on January 30, 2023
Engineers Cite Comparable Values Between Pre-Flight Predictions & Actual Data from Space Launch System

The post-flight analysis team of the Artemis I Space Launch System rocket is interpreting and reviewing data for their final report on the mission’s performance. Their findings will be used to refine plans for future Artemis missions to the moon and beyond, NASA said Friday.

Over four terabytes of pre-launch and launch information as well as nearly 31 TB of imagery data were gathered by SLS support engineers at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama.

A new RS-25 engine controller enabled the team to amass more than 100 measurements including temperatures, speeds, pressures and vibrations. They found that the engines’ thrust and mixture ratio control valves were within 5 percent of their value predictions, while internal pressures and temperatures were within 2 percent of pre-flight predicted values.

“The correlation between actual flight performance and predicted performance for Artemis I was excellent,” SLS program manager John Honeycutt said. “There is engineering and an art to successfully building and launching a rocket, and the analysis on the SLS rocket’s inaugural flight puts NASA and its partners in a good position to power missions for Artemis II and beyond.”

Government Technology/News
L3Harris Completes Critical Design Review Phase for Viper Shield EW System; Ed Zoiss Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on January 30, 2023
L3Harris Completes Critical Design Review Phase for Viper Shield EW System; Ed Zoiss Quoted

L3Harris has reached a critical design review benchmark in the development of its Viper Shield electronic warfare system, which is expected to enhance the offensive and defensive EW capabilities for Lockheed Martin’s F-16 Block 70/72 Foreign Military Sales aircraft.

Created specifically for the vessel, the AN/ALQ-254(V)1 Viper Shield will deliver a virtual electronic shield that bolsters the aircraft’s defenses using a multiple digital radio frequency, memory-based jamming system, L3Harris announced from Melbourne, Florida on Monday.

“Viper Shield is the highest-performance, lowest-risk EW option for F-16 Vipers in an increasingly dangerous world. As the only EW system for these aircraft to successfully achieve this CDR milestone, we are one step closer to helping our global customers detect and defeat modern advanced threats,” said Ed Zoiss, president of space and airborne systems at L3Harris.

During testing conducted at the Lockheed Martin Systems Integration Lab last year, Viper Shield demonstrated interoperability with the novel APG-83 Active Electronically Scanned Array Radar.

This technology includes an open-systems architecture utilizing commercial-off-the-shelf technology, which makes the system easier to modify and reduces lifecycle costs.

Using internal research and development investments and international commitments, L3Harris eliminated the need for U.S. government funding to build the Viper Shield EW system for the aircraft.

Once new hardware and software is installed into the system, Viper Shield will return to Lockheed Martin Systems Integration Lab to assess the complete compatibility of the next set of planned capabilities with the F-16 Block 70/72 FMS aircraft. The company expects to complete the next stage of the development process in the second quarter of 2023.

L3Harris’ other work in the electronic warfare realm includes an ongoing $947 million Air Force contract, under which the company is currently improving the AN/ALQ-172 EW self-protection system used in the service branch’s B-52 aircraft. Similar to Viper Shield, the AN/ALQ-172 system is intended to counter multiple electronic spectrum threats that may impact aircraft operations.

Executive Moves/News
MaryKathryn Robinson Named Contract Policy Director Within DOD Acquisition Office
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 30, 2023
MaryKathryn Robinson Named Contract Policy Director Within DOD Acquisition Office

MaryKathryn Robinson, most recently deputy program executive officer for combat and mission support at the U.S. Air Force, has joined the Department of Defense’s office of the undersecretary for acquisition and sustainment as director of contract policy.

She will directly report to John Tenaglia, principal director of defense pricing and contracting, as she oversees all operations and activities of the contract policy directorate, according to a DOD memo published Friday.

The CP directorate creates new procurement policies, leads career development initiatives for the contracting workforce and manages peer reviews on competitive contracting actions greater than $1 billion.

Michael Pelkey, who served as director of contract policy on an interim basis, will continue to serve as deputy director.

Robinson’s career at the Air Force included time as deputy director of contracting, deputy chief for contract operations division and division chief for strategic sourcing and contract policy.

She also served as a contracting officer at the Joint Strike Fighter Program Office and the Missile Defense Agency.

Government Technology/News
DISA Launches Pilot Program to Test DOD’s Classified Cloud Environment
by Naomi Cooper
Published on January 30, 2023
DISA Launches Pilot Program to Test DOD’s Classified Cloud Environment

The Defense Information System Agency will begin limited user testing of the Department of Defense’s first cloud environment authorized to host classified data for military services and DOD components. 

DISA said Friday the pilot testing for DOD365-Secret follows the general availability of Microsoft’s Office 365 Government Secret, which offers a set of cloud-based productivity, compliance, collaboration and security tools that can handle military and government data at Impact Level 6.

Paul Lorimer, corporate vice president for the Office 365 enterprise and cloud engineering at Microsoft, said the company’s new cloud environment includes Exchange, Outlook and Microsoft 365 Apps to enable secure collaboration among users.

“Secure cloud productivity tools can enable greater operational capabilities for our service members wherever they are. This new environment will run the latest enterprise-grade Office 365 Secret productivity, security, compliance, and collaboration applications,” Lorimer wrote in a blog post on Wednesday.

Defense organizations looking to participate in the pilot can submit applications to DISA beginning on Jan. 30.

Government Technology/News/Space
5 AFRL Mission Area Leads Instituted to Meet USSF Science & Tech Needs; Andy Williams Quoted
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 30, 2023
5 AFRL Mission Area Leads Instituted to Meet USSF Science & Tech Needs; Andy Williams Quoted

Maj. Gen. Heather Pringle, commander of the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory, named five space mission area leads and created the role of deputy technology executive officer for space science and technology to prioritize S&T needs in support of the U.S. Space Force, AFRL reported Friday.

The new Andrew “Andy”Williams, deputy TEO for space S&T at AFRL, said the space MALs will facilitate client engagement with external stakeholders and help ensure communication by translating between S&T platforms and operational capability gaps.

The five space mission areas are space information mobility under Wellesley Pereira; space domain awareness under Laura Durr; space logistics, access and mobility under Robert Antypas; space superiority under Lt. Col. Michael “Peewee” Sherman; and space security and international partnerships under Ron Caton.

“The five new space MALs will assist me with integrating technical capabilities across the AFRL enterprise to provide the USSF with the necessary technology to deter our adversaries in space,” Williams said.

Williams said the MALs have started to discuss the goals they want to meet by the end of 2023 and those goals are documenting integrated space technology strategy and strengthening S&T communication across the Space Force.

He added that he plans to broaden four major focus areas within the AFRL portfolio: hybrid architecture; emerging technologies such as machine learning, autonomy, machine intelligence and quantum; integration with the Space Force; and space logistics.

“So, to maintain that technical advantage, it’s critical that we maintain that S&T pipeline, from basic research all the way to advanced capabilities and prototyping, and then delivering that to the acquisition communities,” Williams said. “You can then provide the critical capabilities to the warfighter, and AFRL has a role in almost that entire pipeline.”

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