Loading...
The Space Force’s Deep-Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) program is suffering construction delays and cost overruns at its first site in Western Australia, which has pushed the third site’s construction back by 10 months to July 2030.…

Breaking analysis of what happened and who is affected.
The Space Force’s Deep-Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) program is suffering construction delays and cost overruns at its first site in Western Australia, which has pushed the third site’s construction back by 10 months to July 2030.…
Read full report →Segment ImpactDeep dive into how this impacts each market segment.
The GAO-flagged delays and cost overruns on the Space Force’s Deep-Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) program materially shift near-term execution and award timing for contractors tied to site construction and systems integration.…
Read full report →Action KitActionable checklists and implementation guidance.
The Space Force’s Deep-Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) program is facing construction delays and cost growth at the first site in Western Australia, and those impacts have pushed the third site’s construction back by 10 months to July 2030.…
Read full report →The Space Force’s Deep-Space Advanced Radar Capability (DARC) program is suffering construction delays and cost overruns at its first site in Western Australia, which has pushed the third site’s construction back by 10 months to July 2030. The FY2027 budget request allocates $442 million to DARC, and $1.6 billion is planned through FY2031, confirming the program will continue with all three sites despite earlier consideration of canceling the third location. These developments affect Northrop Grumman’s existing contracts and introduce uncertainty about the timing of the third-site contract award, which had been expected in late 2026 or early 2027. For contractors, the combination of schedule slip and confirmed program funding changes competitive dynamics and near-term capture timing. Immediate implications are: opportunity timing will shift, current prime/subcontract relationships may be renegotiated or reprioritized, and compliance and capture teams must re-evaluate bid/no-bid decisions against the revised timeline. Use this window to refresh capture pipelines, validate compliance posture, and reposition for a shifted award cadence.
Affected segments include defense and aerospace firms working in radar systems, space systems, construction and related program support. Explicit items from segmentation:
If you require specific contract vehicles or solicitation identifiers, those are pending source review.
A: The Summary states the third site’s construction is pushed back by 10 months to July 2030. Exact award or start dates beyond that are uncertain.
A: The FY2027 budget request includes $442 million for the program, with $1.6 billion planned through FY2031.
A: The Summary notes the situation affects Northrop Grumman’s existing contracts and creates uncertainty around the timing of the third-site contract award, which had been expected in late 2026 or early 2027. Details on reprocurement strategy, recompete timing, or contract modifications are pending source review.
Which Cabrillo products to leverage now:
Who to notify:
First 48-hour response playbook
Reference materials: Winning Federal Contracts Guide (/insights/winning-federal-contracts), CMMC Compliance Guide (/insights/cmmc-compliance-guide), CUI (Controlled Unclassified Information)-Safe CRM Guide (/insights/cui-safe-crm-guide).
Air & Space Forces Magazine (https://www.airandspaceforces.com/deep-space-radar-construction-delayed-gao-says/)
This brief was compiled by the cabrillo signals intelligence desk. Methodology: this brief was auto-drafted from a monitored regulatory/news signal by the Signals detection pipeline, then auto-published under the War Room freshness program with an editorial quality gate (minimum length, sourcing, no unresolved drafting placeholders) and a weekly publish cap. It has not been reviewed by a human editor prior to publication.