Latest News

US FAA spends $6 billion on air traffic radar, telecom and other equipment

Bryan Bedford, the head of the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, said that the agency will spend $6 billion on telecom infrastructure for air traffic control and on radar surveillance systems by 2028.

Congress has approved $12.5 billion for the reform of the U.S. aging air traffic control system, and the administration is seeking another $19 billion to complete the project. The FAA air traffic control system has suffered a number of failures including major outages affecting Newark traffic.

FAA Administrator Bedford also defended his agency's decision of requiring flight cuts in the midst of a government shutdown. He told a U.S. House Aviation Subcommittee that he will ensure the safety air traffic?in Washington, despite legislation which could allow for more military helicopter flights.

Bedford stated that the FAA has compressed radar and telecom modernization into a 3-year timeline, down 15 years. It had also already "transitioned" more than a third of its copper infrastructure onto fiber.

Last month, FAA announced that it had selected Peraton, an American national security company owned and operated by Veritas, to oversee the overhaul of the U.S. aging air traffic control system. Congress approved funding following decades of complaints about airport congestion, technological failures, and flight delays.

Bedford stated at the hearing that Donald Trump demanded Peraton to accept $200 million less for overseeing the contract than originally planned. Peraton didn't immediately comment.

In a report from 2023, it was stated that the FAA’s communication system had been outdated for several years. It also said that many of its systems were no longer able to be repaired. A separate report last year said that 51 of the FAA's air traffic control telesytems were unsustainable.

The FAA said Peraton would begin working on initial priorities, such as setting up new digital command centers and converting to modern fiber infrastructure from copper.

A report released in October showed that the FAA's 15-billion dollar "Next Gen" overhaul of air traffic control project, which began more than 20 years ago, had been plagued by delays and cost overruns, as well as being less ambitious than originally envisioned. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith in Washington, David Shepardson)

(source: Reuters)