NASA Seeks Efficiencies in JPL’s $Billions FFRDC Operations

For the first time in decades, NASA will open bidding for the management and operation of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, a federally funded research and development center in Southern California that has been exclusively managed by the California Institute of Technology since the 1930s. The agency’s decision reflects a growing United States space economy and a desire to assess alternative management approaches for the contract, which has a potential maximum value of $30 billion if all options are exercised under the current agreement that runs through September 30. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman stated the move is about ensuring the agency can “execute faster, operate more efficiently, and continue to deliver high-quality science and engineering.” This competition signals a broader government effort to strengthen performance and drive mission outcomes more affordably while maintaining continuity for JPL’s critical work on ongoing and future missions.

This decision arrives alongside a burgeoning U.S. space economy, which NASA officials believe has fostered a viable competitive market for programmatic and institutional elements of the FFRDC operations. The current contract between NASA and Caltech, initiated on October 1, 2023, has a potential maximum value of $30 billion should all options be exercised, underscoring the substantial scale of its operations and the financial implications of this change. NASA intends to maintain the laboratory’s existing physical location and ensure continuity for both active and planned missions throughout the transition, mirroring practices adopted by the Department of Energy, which has competitively awarded five of its sixteen FFRDC management contracts in the last decade. This procurement process is already underway, allowing sufficient time for a thorough competition and award cycle while safeguarding ongoing laboratory operations and missions; the agency anticipates a seamless transition that will position the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to continue its legacy of scientific discovery and technological advancement for years to come.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory began under S. Army control in the 1930s and continued through successive sole-source contracts; however, NASA is now fundamentally altering this longstanding arrangement by opening the next management and operations contract to competitive bidding. This shift acknowledges a growing U.S. space economy. Despite the competition, NASA emphasizes its commitment to maintaining continuity for both current and future missions, as well as preserving the laboratory’s existing physical location; the initiated procurement process is designed to allow ample time for a comprehensive competition and award cycle without disrupting ongoing scientific endeavors, reflecting NASA’s commitment to responsible use of taxpayer resources and continued innovation.

The Jet Propulsion Laboratory has delivered some of the most extraordinary scientific and engineering achievements in NASA’s history.

Stay current. See today’s quantum computing news on Quantum Zeitgeist for the latest breakthroughs in qubits, hardware, algorithms, and industry deals.
Avatar of Rusty Flint

Rusty Flint

Rusty is a quantum science nerd. He's been into academic science all his life, but spent his formative years doing less academic things. Now he turns his attention to write about his passion, the quantum realm. He loves all things Quantum Physics especially. Rusty likes the more esoteric side of Quantum Computing and the Quantum world. Everything from Quantum Entanglement to Quantum Physics. Rusty thinks that we are in the 1950s quantum equivalent of the classical computing world. While other quantum journalists focus on IBM's latest chip or which startup just raised $50 million, Rusty's over here writing 3,000-word deep dives on whether quantum entanglement might explain why you sometimes think about someone right before they text you. (Spoiler: it doesn't, but the exploration is fascinating)

Latest Posts by Rusty Flint: