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Advanced Arctic Radar Remote Sensing

Originally published Advanced Arctic Radar Remote Sensing on by https://www.erdcwerx.org/advanced-arctic-radar-remote-sensing/ at ERDCWERX

Overview

The U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL) seeks solutions enabling research toward advanced radar remote sensing methods, radar instrument development, and associated computational frameworks for more robust terrain characterization in Arctic environments. A total of up to $900,000 may be available to make several awards for solutions that deliver new instrumentation, methodologies, tools, software repositories, etc. for advanced radar remote sensing methodologies toward terrain characterization in cold regions.

Problem Statement

Radar remote sensing instruments that characterize Arctic terrain properties (like snow mass, soil freeze/thaw, moisture, and surface stability) are crucial for U.S. Army operations in cold regions. While imaging radar on various platforms and frequencies shows potential for estimating these properties, current instruments are not specifically designed or developed for cold terrain sensing. Transitioning radar from stationary towers to mobile platforms requires advanced signal processing, more complex than other sensing methods.

Broader engineering and geospatial analyses tools will benefit from the coordination of developing hardware and methods as well as the integration of computational frameworks with software code repositories. These tools are vital to removing requirements that rely on human expertise to process, analyze, and assess data in Arctic regions.

Project Objective

The primary objective of this Individual Program Requirement (IPR) is to develop new solutions or advance existing partial solutions to fully satisfy either the Threshold or Objective Goals specified below.

Threshold Goal*

Demonstration of advanced radar remote sensing methods (in the megahertz to gigahertz radar frequencies) to address cold regions terrain properties (e.g., snow mass, soil freeze thaw, soil moisture, etc.) in a relative cold or Arctic environment to include but not limited to the minimum required outcomes:

*As a minimum, any proposals considered must deliver a solution able to meet these required outcomes. Proposals unable to deliver a solution addressing these outcomes will be excluded.

Objective Goal

An ideal solution under this funding profile would deliver this outcome.

Project Manager

Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratory (CRREL), U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC)

Requirements

All potential solutions will be considered against the program requirements and technology readiness levels. To be considered, a pre-proposal must clearly:

Applicants must be registered on SAM.gov. Submissions should NOT include confidential or proprietary details.

Estimated Government Funding Profile

Up to $900,000.

More than one solution may be awarded within the limits of this funding profile. The government may fund portions of several offered solutions to achieve the desired end state.

All resultant contracts will be firm-fixed price. All items, technologies, and services (including research and development) procured via this CSO are treated as commercial. The Contracting Officer must determine the price fair and reasonable prior to award.

Estimated Period of Performance

Desired End State

Effective solutions that provide new radar sensing tools and methodologies and instruments for Arctic regions will enable timely planning and decision-making for the warfighter.

Evaluation Criteria

Submissions will be reviewed based on the criteria described in ERDC’s CSO Solicitation document by ERDC subject matter experts. Submissions may be shared as appropriate with other ERDC stakeholders. The government has the authority to decline all submitted proposals. The government does not plan to engage in the debrief process outlined in FAR part 15 but will provide feedback to unsuccessful offerors as appropriate and at its discretion.

Notional Project Schedule

Proposed project milestones include:

February 28, 2025 Project Announced, Submissions Open
March 21, 2025 Question Period Ends, FAQs Finalized
March 31, 2025 Submissions Close
April 1-11, 2025 ERDC Evaluation Period
April-May 2025 Participants Selected for Phase II are Notified by ERDC
June 2025 Phase II Full Proposal Deadline

*Dates may vary to accommodate project team and participant availability. The government may accelerate the pre-proposal review/feedback timeline, and therefore also require earlier delivery of full proposals.

Project Security Classification

Unclassified

How to Participate

Submission Instructions: This solicitation is issued consistent with the authority granted to the U.S. Army Engineer Research and Development Center (ERDC) through the establishment of its Commercial Solutions Opening (CSO), W913E524SC001. Submissions must follow the requirements as detailed in the CSO Solicitation document.

Questions:
Interested parties may submit questions using this form until March 21, 2025.

Submissions must meet stated requirements and be received no later than 10:00 am CT on March 31, 2025.

ERDC-CRREL is conducting this project announcement on a full and open basis and intends to award contracts in accordance with FAR part 12 and the FAR part that is deemed most appropriate for the solution proposed (i.e. FAR part 13, 15, and/or 35); the government reserves the right to award prototype agreements (e.g. Other Transaction Agreements), in accordance with 10 U.S.C. 4022, if deemed appropriate and in the government’s best interest.

Originally published ERDCWERX

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