Arlington-based CACI International will assist the U.S. Army with repairs on tanks and other tactical ground vehicles in combat zones as part of a newly awarded contract that could be worth up to $36 billion over its 20-year lifecycle, company officials announced Tuesday.
The contract falls under the Army’s Field and Installation Readiness Support Team program, which includes a wide range of projects such as logistics support services and repairing equipment.
CACI will compete with multiple prime contract award winners for specific task orders over the life of the contract.
The award will be dispersed over four five-year acquisition cycles, each with a ceiling of $9 billion.
The contract is a new project for CACI, not an extension of existing work, and will help the federal contractor expand its engineering and logistics business, said company officials.
“CACI offers proven logistics expertise and a demonstrated track record of successful support for the U.S. Army and large task order contracts,” said Paul Cofoni, president of U.S. Operations for CACI, in a statement.
“Our CACI team gives us significant depth and breadth to provide a complete range of innovative and high-value solutions that will increase Army capabilities and ensure our troops are well equipped, better secured and ready at all times.”
CACI brought in $1.76 billion in revenue in fiscal 2006, an 8 percent increase over the previous year. The company is also one of several local prime contractors competing for task orders under the Army’s $19.25 million Strategic Services Sourcing contract.
