By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Air Force Secretary Deborah James on Monday said a contract for a new long-range bomber would be awarded soon, and the project would not be considered a "new start" program that could be halted if Congress fails to pass a budget for fiscal 2016.
Northrop Grumman Corp (NYSE:NOC), maker of the B-2 bomber, is competing against a team made up of Boeing (NYSE:BA) Co and Lockheed Martin Corp (NYSE:LMT) for a deal that could be worth $50 billion to $80 billion to the winning bidder.
James said the bomber program would not be subject to a ban on new program starts that would take effect if Congress passes only a year-long continuing resolution for fiscal 2016, instead of a budget, since the program official began in fiscal 2012.
The Air Force says it has spent $1.8 billion on research and development of the new classified aircraft since 2012.
The service kicked off the final competition for the bomber in July 2014, saying it expected to pick a winner this spring, but the award date has been delayed several times. Last month James said the award could slip into September.
James decried a botched 10-year cost estimate for the new bomber program that was submitted to Congress as a "regrettable error" and said the cost of the program was not expected to rise nearly as sharply as indicated by the faulty estimate.
She said the mistake, first reported by Bloomberg last week, stemmed from human error and a lack of proper oversight, but the process had been revised.
The initial Air Force projection for the cost of the bomber program over 10 years submitted this year put the cost at $58.4 billion, a 76 percent spike from last year's estimate. The Air Force later said the true cost estimate for the 10-year period was $41.7 billion.
Representative Jackie Speier, a California Democrat and member of the House Armed Services Committee, on Monday asked James for a detailed explanation about the mix-up.
"It raises questions about the management of a crucial program that lacks transparency, on which we cannot afford serious cost overruns, development errors, and reduced production numbers that would deprive the United States of one of its core military capabilities," she wrote.