Space Rapid Capabilities Office
SpRCO insignia
Office overview
FormedDecember 14, 2018 (2018-12-14)
HeadquartersKirtland Air Force Base,
New Mexico
MottoEgo sum ille qui pulsat
"I am the one who knocks"
Office executives
  • Kelly D. Hammett[1], Director
  • Robert D. Eidsmoe, Deputy Director[2]
Parent departmentUnited States Space Force
Websitekirtland.af.mil/Units/Space-Rapid-Capabilities-Office/

The Space Rapid Capabilities Office (Space RCO or SpRCO) is a Direct Reporting Unit of the United States Space Force which specializes in the expedited development and rapid production and deployment of space capabilities to fulfill short-term critical needs. The relatively small and unique office's work is directed by requirements for capabilities provided by the Commander of United States Space Command, and aims to provide capabilities responsive to a request within 1 to 3 years.

Description

Established in the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2018, Space Rapid Capabilities Office (Space RCO) is one of the United States Space Force (USSF)'s three military acquisitions organizations; Space Development Agency and the much larger Space Systems Command are the others. It is intended to help procure urgent space-related projects, similar to Air Force Rapid Capabilities Office; Space RCO can issue contracts of up to $1 billion without outside authorization. Its main customer is United States Space Command.[3]

Space RCO is among USSF's "most secretive agencies", according to SpaceNews, because it rarely discusses activities. Kelly Hammett, agency directory, stated in February 2023 that it decided to disclose developing three of the payloads on USSF-67 as part of a gradual reduction in secrecy, to better work with the space industry and rest of government.[3]

Operations

Requests for capabilities

Requirements can originate from across the acquisition and warfighting enterprise, driven by combatant commanders and U.S. national security space enterprise demands in order to fulfill joint military operational needs, but by law must be validated by the Commander of United States Space Command prior to Space RCO taking action.[4]

Development priorities

Speed

Shorter timelines for deliverable space capabilities is the core of the Space RCO. In order to accomplish this, the office is allowed four significant departures in methodology from traditional Department of Defense procedure to accelerate the process of space acquisitions: It has a short and narrow chain of command; early and consistent end user involvement; small, cohesively integrated and empowered program teams; and a cadre of preassembled support across human resources, contracting, finance, IT, and security. The office explained on its Facebook page, "speed of warfighting relevance isn't just a tagline, its the reason we exist."[5] As a result, Space RCO projects have maintained an average 50% shorter timeframe from request for proposal to funding award than traditional contracting methods within the Department of Defense.[5] The office has issued more than 40 contracts in the two years since it has begun issuing.[5]

Outreach

The Space RCO conducts outreach to small and midsize businesses to broaden its visibility and enhance its network of potential partners to harness commercial solutions to accelerate research and development periods.[5] It participated in the creation of SpaceWERX, the Space Force offshoot of the Air Force's AFWERX start-up accelerator built on the financing model of Air Force Special Operations Command which can provide immediate on the spot cash payments to eligible projects from start-ups who pitch their ideas at pitch days and develop them in idea incubators.[6] It also allows initial rounds of funding to be used to generate credibility for startups to find other commercial backing to grow and build their ideas, and gives the government a route to procure resulting technology in the future. The programs have also established multiple permanent incubator facilities at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and in Austin, Texas, and Washington, D.C.[5]

The office has partnered with the Los Alamos National Laboratory to advance the Lab Embedded Entrepreneur Program (LEEP), which provides innovators up to $400K in funding, access to the lab’s expertise, and training to rapidly advance technology, collaborating with the lab on Space Systems thrust.[5]

Organization

Space RCO was designated a Direct Reporting Unit October 21, 2020, reporting directly to the Chief of Space Operations.[5]

Personnel

The office is led by a civilian director and deputy director, but employs a mix of Department of Defense civilians, and active duty members of the Space Force and Air Force.[5]

Locations

Space RCO is headquartered at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico, but has additional staff located in Washington, D.C., and Colorado Springs, Colorado.[4]

Board of directors

This board will presumably include the space force acquisition executive mandated by Congress in the NDAA FY2020.

List of directors

No. Director Term
Portrait Name Took office Left office Term length
Shahnaz M. Punjani
Punjani, Shahnaz M.Colonel
Shahnaz M. Punjani
Acting
December 12, 2017July 2018215 days
Timothy Sejba
Sejba, Timothy A.Colonel
Timothy Sejba[8]
Acting
July 2018February 2019215 days
1
Michael W. Roberts
Roberts, Michael W.Michael W. Roberts[10]February 2019May 28, 20223 years, 102 days
2
Kelly D. Hammett
Hammett, Kelly D.Kelly D. Hammett[1][12]June 8, 2022Incumbent1 year, 214 days

References

  1. 1 2 "The Space Rapid Capabilities Office on LinkedIn: The Space Rapid Capabilities Office is proud to welcome our new Director | 69 comments". Linkedin.com.
  2. "Robert D. Eidsmoe Biography" (PDF). Kirtland Air Force Base. 2021.
  3. 1 2 Erwin, Sandra (2023-02-20). "Secretive military space agency stepping out of the shadows". Space News (published February 2023). Retrieved 2023-03-01.
  4. 1 2 "Space Rapid Capabilities Office Fact Sheet" (PDF). Kirtland Air Force Base. August 2, 2021.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Space Rapid Capabilities Office". Facebook. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
  6. Oprihory, Jennifer-Leigh (2021-02-24). "AFWERX Aims to Formally Launch SpaceWERX This Summer". Air Force Magazine. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
  7. "About Us". Losangeles.spaceforce.mil.
  8. "About Us". Losangeles.spaceforce.mil.
  9. "Michael W. Roberts". Af.mil.
  10. "Michael W. Roberts". Af.mil.
  11. "DR. KELLY D. HAMMETT : Biography" (PDF). Kirtland.af.mil. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
  12. "DR. KELLY D. HAMMETT : Biography" (PDF). Kirtland.af.mil. Retrieved July 23, 2022.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.