In its budget proposal for 2017, Norway's Defense Department told the country's parliament of its plan to order 12 additional fifth-generation stealth fighters. "They continue to stay strong in the program and it shows the confidence they have in the F-35," said Ken Ross, a spokesman for Lockheed Martin in Fort Worth, Texas, where the airplane is built.
"Norway and other international partners on the F-35 program have been involved in the concept of a block buy since its inception," said Joe DellaVedova, a Pentagon spokesman for The F-35 Joint Programme Office (JPO). "Due to vast economies of scale, all countries will achieve significant reductions on the price of their jets."
Buying the supersonic stealth jets in blocks drives down the cost, from $112 million per unit in 2013, to $80-85 million each.
The JPO must take into consideration US government policies that restrict a "multi-year procurement" unless a weapons program completes initial operational test and evaluation. In fact, the completion of the F-35 is not due until at least 2018. The Government Accountability Office reported in April that the F-35 program "has around 20 percent of development testing remaining, including complex mission systems software testing," according to Military.com.
Norway is one of eight partner nations buying what is the most expensive weapon system ever built. Among nations participating in the development of the F-35 are Australia, Canada, Great Britain, Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands and Turkey. Japan and South Korea, along with Israel, are foreign military customers.