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Friday, September 4, 2009

President Obama Considering Cost Cuts To Get US Astronauts Out Of Low Earth Orbit FLights

Obama Administration Mulls U.S. Human Spaceflight Future
By Amy Klamper
Space News Staff Writer
posted: 03 September 2009
05:15 pm ET

U.S. President Barack Obama is not expected to significantly boost the projectedfunding profile for NASA's manned spaceflight program in the next few years, despite warnings from a blue-ribbon panel that the U.S. space agency needs between $3 billion and $4 billion more annually to send astronauts back to the Moon, according to sources with ties to the administration.

Instead, White House and NASA officials are scrubbing NASA's 2010 budget proposal, and the assumptions made by the blue-ribbon panel it underpins, for potential cost savings over the next decade that could help fund some means of sending astronauts beyond low Earth orbit as soon as 2020. One possibility being weighed by the administration is abandoning the idea of astronaut landings on the Moon in favor of missions that would take astronauts on close flybys of heavenly bodies such as asteroids.

Under NASA's current program of record, dubbed Constellation, the agency is developing hardware to return astronauts to the Moon, including a space shuttle replacement system consisting of the Orion crew capsule and its Ares 1 launcher. On Aug. 14, however, a White House-appointed panel led by former Lockheed Martin chief Norman Augustine told NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and White House science adviser John Holdren that NASA's projected spending profile over the next several years is nowhere near sufficient to carry out that plan.

Part of the problem is that NASA has been operating under the assumption that U.S. support to the international space station — which costs some $3 billion annually — would end in 2016, even though that support is widely expected to be extended at least through 2020. On top of that, the president's five-year projected funding profile for Constellation, unveiled with the White House's 2010 budget request, is roughly $3.4 billion less than what was envisioned by the previous administration.

The challenges confronting Constellation were brought into stark relief by the Augustine panel's findings, which indicate that Orion and Ares 1, currently slated to debut in 2015, are unlikely to be ready to ferry astronauts to the station before 2017. At best, the panel concluded, NASA needs between $3 billion to $4 billion more annually to send humans to the Moon by the mid-2020s, according to briefing charts available on the panel's Web site.

"We've been acting as if we were doing something that there's no money to do," said John Logsdon, a space policy expert at the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum here. "And I think with the visibility in our community, and the visibility of Obama's conclusions, the issue can no longer be avoided. Let's hope we don't make choices without understanding their consequences."

With the Obama administration just beginning to digest the Augustine panel's preliminary findings, it is too early to know what direction NASA will be given, though some likely options are beginning to emerge. Among them is a plan to spend some $2.5 billion over the next five years to develop a commercial crew transportation system to low Earth orbit.

While this option in theory would free NASA to pursue more challenging missions in deep space, sources familiar with the administration's thinking say the agency should not expect any more than an extra $1 billion for manned exploration beginning in 2012 or 2013; the $2.5 billion proposed for commercial crew transportation would be tapped from existing manned exploration budgets over the next five years, these sources said.

NASA's budget profile for human spaceflight, about $80 billion through 2020, is some $28 billion less than what the agency was told it could expect four years ago when it selected the Constellation architecture, which also includes a heavy-lift rocket dubbed Ares 5 and the Altair lunar lander.

But despite these funding reductions, sources say there are prospects for finding cost savings within NASA's existing program. For example, shifting NASA's acquisition strategy for the Orion Crew Exploration Vehicle from a traditional government procurement to one that is commercial in nature could yield significant savings in the near-term, according to sources familiar with NASA spending processes.

"Going from a cost-plus contract to a firm-fixed price would mean that there's less government people from [NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston] involved in the design process," said one source familiar with NASA spending. "Forty percent cost savings on Constellation is probably not unreasonable."

Another option under review would hand space station operations over to a private contractor, potentially saving $500 million to $1 billion per year, industry sources said.

Additional funding for human spaceflight operations could come from pots of money historically vulnerable to plunder, including technology development. While the Augustine panel assumed NASA would ramp up spending in this area from $500 million in 2011 to $1.5 billion by 2015, sources close to the administration say that investment could be held at around $800 million a year.

However, some question the wisdom of the cost-saving options being discussed, particularly relying on private companies to transport humans in low Earth orbit.

"I think the budget constrictions created by the fiscal 2010 budget are forcing the Augustine Committee toward approaches with a great deal of new risk," said Scott Pace, director of the Space Policy Institute at the George Washington University here. "A government system capable of going to the Moon, like Ares 1/Orion, is also capable of going to [low Earth orbit] and that's the 'public option,' if you will, that allows NASA to place responsible bets on commercial suppliers," said Pace, who held senior posts at NASA and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy under former President George W. Bush.

While the future of Orion and Ares 1 remain uncertain, sources close to the administration say the latter is likely to meet the budget ax in favor of an alternative launcher. Likewise, Orion could be vulnerable if a safe, reliable commercial option for crew transport to the space station could be quickly developed, though observers suggested the Lockheed Martin-designed crew capsule could serve as a government backup to any future commercial capability.

Lift options being weighed include a shuttle-derived vehicle — other than Ares 1 and Ares 5, both of which are shuttle-derived — or a commercially developed rocket fueled by kerosene. United Launch Alliance's Atlas 5 has a kerosene-fueled main engine that is built in Russia; one of the company's industrial partners, Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne, has taken preliminary steps toward manufacturing that hardware domestically.

The White House is expected to submit an amended 2010 budget request for NASA's exploration program by mid-September, according to sources with ties to the administration. Political watchers note that activity in the Senate — which has yet to pass a NASA appropriations bill this year — likely will be dominated by health care reform in the coming weeks.

Comments (121)

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ayman31 avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:01 pm ET
ayman31 wrote:
You never see them talking about gutting or cutting military spending. It always seems to me that we're 1 nanometer from approving a military spending bill, but miles away from putting any money into meaningfull science. I seriously think it's our psychology. We're still animals and we're ruled by a fear complex deep inside our animal, old world brain. Our new brain is doing its darndest to overcome the fear and emotions, but it's slow going.
Blob avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:08 pm ET
Blob wrote:
"A government system capable of going to the Moon, like Ares 1/Orion"

As we all well know, Mr. Pace, Ares I and Orion aren't capable of going to the moon. Do you people inhabit some kind of alternate reality where dishonesty is acceptable and stupidity is rewarded?
krash avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:29 pm ET
krash wrote:
This was predictable. So much for Obama doing more for science than Bush. Instead we get cash for clunkers, an idiotic $1 Trillion healthcare bill that most American's oppose, and $800,000,000,000.00 worth of assorted pork that can't even be substianted as an effective means to stimulate the economy. 
SpaceNutter avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:33 pm ET
Wave the wight flag now....... No moon no mars....
Grrrrrrrrrr get some balls.
Bill_Wright avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:43 pm ET
If President Obama would listen to me I would offer that to spend dollars on an American space program is to create jobs in America.  It takes a lot more machinists to create a rocket than a car.  It takes just as many construction workers to build or re-build factories.  It takes as many maintenance jobs to keep the factories clean, maybe more due to the need for special "clean rooms".  And those folks would be paid more, would not default on credit cards or mortgages, and would probably buy new cars.  Al Shepard saw no bucks on the Moon but he reported that all of the money ended up in the hands of the contractors and workers.  Turn NASA into an oversight organization to keep the contractors from bleeding us dry and to hand out the real stimulus dollars that it will take to bring the US into the 21st Century.  Cars are so last century.  I want one of those Jetson vehicles!
Bill
Rickstar avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:44 pm ET
Rickstar wrote:
Oh well,congrats China,loox like you win...doh!
VZ avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:44 pm ET
VZ wrote:
Regardless of war spending and such, I support keeping NASA budget steady, do not increase.
Self-appointed "new Von Brauns" must be taught a lesson.
"For a successful technology, reality must take precedence over public relations, for Nature cannot be fooled. -- Richard Feynman".
Ares was sold to us as "safe, simple, soon". It is neither, by a long shot. Why should we reward people who blatantly lied to us?
gslippy avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:46 pm ET
gslippy wrote:
I don't see how abandoning Ares I gets you into space any faster.  This is the kind of Newspeak the Obama Administration uses for so many things.

Ares I will use safe, affordable, proven technology that is already well-along in its development for this application. Starting from scratch, or man-rating some other system, simply lengthens the timeline and demoralizes the space program, as well as millions of Americans who expect this country to be leaders in space.

Prediction: Obama will choose the path which wins him the most votes in 2012, likely protecting Florida jobs. He doesn't give a hoot about science, space, or manned space exploration. He doesn't care about America's leadership in these areas, since he believes the US should simply emulate other countries.
wittywitter avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:47 pm ET
seems like the U.S.can't do it by itself anylonger, we need to join forces with the other agencies of the world to make this all work.
AirSpaceMan avatar
posted 03 September 2009, 6:56 pm ET
This is not exactly a sunny article.  This doesn't look good for us who want to go to the moon, Mars and beyond.  Perhaps we'll just have to wait unti 2012 when we can grab the tiller of the Ship of state and turn it back to the center and go forward.  SIGH!

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