NASA chief Charles
Bolden found himself defending the U.S. space agency's practice of investing in
commercial companies to ferry cargo - and one day crew - to the International
Space Station. The grilling came less than a week after Orbital Science's
successful rocket test flight and after several successful SpaceX cargo flights
to the International Space Station.
Senators on the
appropriations subcommittee for Commerce, Justice and Science questioned NASA's
priorities as they scrutinized the president's request for $17.7 billion to
fund the U.S. space agency in fiscal year 2014. Specifically, they questioned
NASA's ability to see through its plans to develop a heavy-lift rocket, known
as the Space Launch System or SLS, while balancing investments in commercial
enterprises to transport cargo and crew to the space station.
Priorities
The subcommittee's two
top lawmakers, chairwoman Barbara Mikulski of Maryland and vice-chairman
Richard Shelby of Alabama, have NASA facilities in their states.
Senator Shelby said he was concerned that the proposed budget is an example of "chasing the next great idea while sacrificing current investments."
Senator Shelby said he was concerned that the proposed budget is an example of "chasing the next great idea while sacrificing current investments."
"This budget
focuses, I believe, too heavily on maintaining the fiction of privately funded
commercial launch vehicles, which diverts, I think, critical resources from
NASA's goal of developing human spaceflight capabilities with the SLS,"
said Shelby.
NASA Administrator
Bolden said NASA's priorities remain the world's most powerful rocket - the
SLS, as well as the James Webb Space Telescope -- the Hubble's successor -- and
the International Space Station, shored up by commercial crew and cargo
transportation. He called 2013 "a year of decision."
"If we do not get
$822 million in the 2014 budget as requested by the president, it will be my
unfortunate duty to advise the Congress and the president that we probably will
not make 2017 for the availability of an American capability to get our
astronauts to space," said Bolden. "And I will have to tell you
that I'm going to have to come back and ask for authorization to once again pay
the Russians to take our crews to space."
Reliance on
Russia
The NASA administrator
noted that a funding request in 2011 was not met, so the United States was
unable to launch astronauts from its soil in 2015, as had been hoped. The
U.S. has not had a vehicle to take astronauts to the space station since it
retired the shuttle fleet two years ago. NASA is relying on commercial
firms to handle transport to the space station so it can focus its attention on
developing the next-generation of rockets and capsules that can go beyond
low-Earth orbit -- to an asteroid or Mars.
Russian transport to
the space station is costly. The U.S. signed a contract in 2011 to pay
$753 million to Russia in exchange for transport and related services for 12
astronauts from 2014 through mid-2016.
Sequestration
NASA's Bolden, himself
a former astronaut, also emphasized the negative effects of looming, mandatory
across-the-board spending cuts known as sequestration. He said, if
implemented, the cuts will potentially impact the James Webb Space Telescope,
certainly impact the SLS heavy lift rocket and Orion capsule and, in his words,
"devastate commercial crew and cargo."
"You know, right
now we're flying 20 commercial cargo missions to the International Space
Station over the next five years for three-point-some-odd billion dollars - an
incredible value to the nation," he said. "I can't carry that
out under sequester."
The U.S. space agency
chief also countered suggestions that some agreements with commercial companies
lack transparency and are too lenient on deadlines. Bolden disagreed,
saying such agreements give American industry leeway to produce spacecraft that
fulfill NASA's requirements. He added that the agreements have worked
very well, as demonstrated by the successes of both Orbital and SpaceX
vehicles.
Sources :
http://www.voanews.com/content/nasa-space-budget/1649189.html
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