Blue Origin and Anduril have landed new study contracts with the U.S. Air Force to explore how their technology, including rockets, could move military cargo around the world. The contracts under the Air Force’s Rocket Cargo program are relatively small — Blue Origin’s comes in at $1.37 million and Anduril’s at $1 million. But they could be the first steps in revolutionizing how the Pentagon transports cargo. Study contracts like these are also a strong signal as to which players will later compete for larger-dollar funding.
Anduril’s contract is especially intriguing and suggests the defense startup is making forays into an entirely new business line.
The two awards fall under the U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory’s Rocket Experimentation for Global Agile Logistics (REGAL) program. Blue Origin did not respond to TechCrunch’s request for comment, and an Anduril spokesperson directed TechCrunch to AFRL.
REGAL is the experimentation arm of AFRL’s larger Rocket Cargo program, which is focused on “delivery as a service” via orbital transport. The Air Force wants to procure these capabilities via service-type contracts, similar to how the DoD contracts commercial airlines. The aim of the REGAL program is to prove out commercial, reusable rockets, reentry systems, and cargo transportation systems to enable deliveries to remote or hard-to-reach theaters in less than an hour.
While there isn’t much public information about REGAL’s scope of work or timeline, the requests for proposals that underlie the awards contain some interesting information.
Blue Origin’s contract, according to the sparse award listing, is for an analysis of how its tech could support “point-to-point material transportatio …