Leidos (NYSE: LDOS) has won a potential five-year, $191.2 million contract from the U.S. Army to provide software sustainment services for the military branch.
The Department of Defense said Army Contracting Command at Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland launched an online solicitation and received two bids for the cost-plus-fix-fee contract.
The service branch will determine work locations and obligate funds upon award of each task order.
Contract work is expected to conclude on July 25, 2029.
Software-Related Contract Wins Within DOD
In February, Leidos booked a $143 million task order to support the Defense Intelligence Agency’s Open Source Intelligence Integration Center. Under the task order, the Reston, Virginia-based company will design and implement the center’s Tasking, Collection, Processing, Exploitation and Dissemination system.
In March, the Air Force tapped the technology services contractor for a $158 million follow-on prime contract to continue developing and expanding the service branch’s Command and Control Incident Management Emergency Response Application.
C2IMERA is a government-owned software developed by Leidos to create a common operating picture of wing and unit resources used for planning, C2 monitoring, force employment and emergency management.
The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency awarded Leidos the potential $81 million Maru acquisition contract in late March. With this award, the company will provide sustainment support services for existing Integrated Exploitation Environment software and related exploitation features for image science.