NASA’s Landsat 10 Is Coming. Here’s Why Government Contractors Should Care.
NASA is officially moving forward with the next phase of the Landsat program, and businesses involved in aerospace, engineering, manufacturing, software, cybersecurity, and federal contracting should be paying attention.
NASA recently released a draft solicitation for the Landsat 10 spacecraft through the Goddard Space Flight Center. The mission is currently targeted for launch in 2031 and represents another major investment in Earth observation technology and space infrastructure.
For many companies, this may look like just another Government procurement announcement.
It’s much bigger than that.
Programs like Landsat 10 create opportunities not only for large aerospace primes, but also for subcontractors, specialty vendors, consultants, IT firms, manufacturers, cybersecurity companies, logistics providers, and small businesses positioned correctly inside the federal marketplace.
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What Is Landsat 10?
The Landsat program has been one of the world’s longest-running Earth observation initiatives, helping agencies monitor environmental conditions, agriculture, infrastructure, land use, water systems, disaster response, and climate trends.
The upcoming Landsat 10 mission will continue that effort with more advanced technology and expanded operational capabilities.
According to the draft solicitation, the selected contractor will be responsible for designing, developing, integrating, testing, and delivering the Landsat 10 observatory, along with launch support and mission readiness activities.
NASA is expected to release the final RFP later this year.


