dapaterson said:
No. Based on current estimates, if the Hornets cost $X to operate, the costs over 20 years of flying the F-35 will be 20 times $X plus $7B.
Is there any Departmental information stating definitively that the $7B in-service support Vote 1 monies associates with the NGFC/F-35 project is INCREMENTAL to existing fighter force Vote 1 National Procurement/ISS resource levels?
Looking at the
RPP 2011-2012 Planned Departmental Spending figures for Aerospace Readiness of $2.33B for 2011/2012, decreasing slightly to just below $2.0B for following years, a "guesstimate" of approximately 40% of Aerospace Readiness going towards the overall CF188 capability (O&M and ISS/NP) would equate to an existing $0.8B annual cost. If that estimate is "retained" over the future 20-year period, it alone would result in the accounting capture of $16B of equivalent existing CF188 readiness and maintenance costs.
Two extremes in potential budgetting exist for F-35 20-year life-cycle costs, then: a) $7B is entirely incremental, or b) $7B is a complete subset of the anticipated future expenditures of $16B (est.) for the in-service support plan (ISSP).
a) results in
$32B (CY - current year) for a 20-year NGFC programme costs of [$9B capital acquisition, $16B baseline ISSP, $7B incremental F-35 related ISSP], or
b) results in
$25B (CY) for 20 years of F-35 . [$9B capital acquisition, $16B ISSP ($7B of which has been pre-identified as being required by F-35)]
My "non-fighter guy" gut feel looking at other program numbers is that the F-35 program does have some ISS-related "overlap" with the current CF188 ISSP, so the numbers would come in somewhere between those extremes, likely in the $28-30B range over the 20-year period.
:2c:
Regards,
G2G