According to www.marketscreener.com, Leidos and DHL Supply Chain have formed a strategic alliance to jointly bid for the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence (MOD) logistics contract.
Joint Bid for MOD Logistics Contract
The partnership centers on competing for the MOD’s next-generation logistics services framework, which governs end-to-end supply chain operations supporting the UK armed forces. Leidos brings its Support Chain Integration Platform (SCIP), while DHL contributes global supply chain execution expertise and infrastructure across the UK. The alliance aims to deliver integrated digital and physical logistics capabilities — from procurement and warehousing to transport and inventory management — under a single, interoperable architecture.
The collaboration follows Leidos’ recent successful migration of SCIP to the MOD Cloud, a milestone described by Andy Kyte, chief of Defence Logistics and Support at MOD, as “a key milestone in Defence’s digital modernisation journey.” That transition enabled secure, real-time access to supply chain data across defence units and contractors — a foundational step required for AI-driven analytics and enhanced visibility.
SCIP Platform Delivers Secure Transparency
Leidos’ Support Chain Integration Platform (SCIP) is designed to provide the MOD with secure transparency across its supply chain. It gives users a comprehensive understanding of what material they have, where it is located, and who requested it — enabling precise tracking, demand forecasting, and resource allocation. According to the source, SCIP supports “increased efficiency and lower costs” through consolidated data governance and automated workflows.
The platform falls under Leidos’ broader civil security business segment, which accounts for 44.3% of the company’s net sales. This segment includes complex logistics management solutions, vehicle and cargo inspection systems, explosives detection, computer security, and nuclear security technologies. Leidos’ health segment represents 29.5% of net sales, focusing on electronic health records and medical data infrastructure.
Digital Transformation Priorities
Simon Hutchings, vice president for logistics and mission support at Leidos Europe, emphasized the strategic value of accessible data:
“We look forward to leveraging the now accessible data in supporting the MOD and U.K. Defence in their digital transformation to support innovative, secure, and effective solutions that are designed to counter the global challenges and threats posed by contested logistics.” — Simon Hutchings, vice president for logistics and mission support at Leidos Europe
His statement underscores how the alliance directly addresses evolving operational requirements — particularly the need for resilient, cyber-secure, and AI-ready logistics amid heightened geopolitical uncertainty. The MOD Cloud migration has already unlocked opportunities to enhance cybersecurity, improve supply chain visibility, and increase the use of AI — all cited by Andy Kyte as concrete outcomes of the SCIP transition.
This initiative aligns with broader UK defence modernisation efforts launched in 2024, including the Integrated Review Refresh and the Defence Command Paper, both of which prioritise digital infrastructure and supply chain resilience. Unlike commercial logistics contracts, MOD frameworks often span multiple years — with previous iterations running for up to 10 years — making long-term platform stability and upgrade pathways critical evaluation criteria.
Industry Context and Implications
The Leidos–DHL alliance reflects a growing trend among defence logistics providers to combine software-led integration with global physical execution capacity. Similar partnerships have emerged elsewhere: in 2023, BAE Systems partnered with Siemens to deploy digital twin technology across naval supply chains, while Lockheed Martin and IBM co-developed cloud-based logistics analytics tools for the U.S. Department of Defense.
For supply chain professionals, the SCIP–DHL model signals a shift toward hybrid delivery — where proprietary platforms are no longer deployed in isolation but serve as interoperable layers within third-party logistics ecosystems. This reduces vendor lock-in, accelerates adoption of AI-driven decision support, and enables modular scaling across geographies. Crucially, all MOD data remains sovereign and hosted exclusively within UK-based MOD Cloud environments — a non-negotiable requirement confirmed in the Q3 2025 procurement guidance issued by the Defence Equipment and Support agency.
Source: marketscreener.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










