Albuquerque Journal

U.S. nuclear bomb budget falls short by 35 percent, audit finds

- BY JOHN M. DONNELLY CQ-ROLL CALL

WASHINGTON –– Building new atomic bombs to replace the oldest such weapons in the U.S. arsenal will cost 35 percent more than the Energy Department has budgeted, and production will start two years late, according to an internal department estimate cited in a congressio­nal audit.

The estimate for the B61-12 program was produced last fall by the Energy Department’s Office of Cost Estimating and Program Evaluation, and it was cited deep inside a report issued this past week by the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

Developing and producing up to 500 B61-12 bombs will cost $10 billion through fiscal 2026, according to the new estimate. The Energy Department’s National Nuclear Security Agency projected in its fiscal 2017 budget that the program’s would cost $7.4 billion. A few months later, the department updated the estimate to $7.6 billion, but officials there have still not agreed to change the coming fiscal 2018 budget to reflect the cost-analysis office’s higher projection, the GAO report said.

Four years ago, the Pentagon’s cost-estimating office predicted that the new bombs would cost $10 billion and would be delayed. At the time, the Energy Department said that estimate was not accurate.

The program was initially projected to cost $4 billion and production was to have begun this year.

The B61-12 program would replace four types of B61 bombs with one upgraded model that would guide bombs to their targets with a satellite-guidance kit on their tails.

Production of the first of the upgraded bombs, which is scheduled to start in fiscal 2020, will more than likely begin two years later, the department’s cost estimators said. But the Energy Department and Pentagon schedule projection­s have by all indication­s not changed.

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