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NASA The Almighty Buck United States

Calls For Funding NASA Commercial Crew Grow 71

MarkWhittington writes: As summer starts to give way to fall and the end of the current fiscal year draws nigh, demands that NASA's commercial crew program be fully funded are being heard with greater frequency and urgency. Astronaut Scott Kelly took time off from his year-long sojourn on the International Space Station to entreat Congress to pony up. IO9 was a little more caustic, stating "Dammit, Congress: Just Buy NASA its Own Space Taxi, Already." Monday, Slate became the latest media outlet to take up the cause

The situation is depressingly familiar to those who have followed the fortunes of the space program since the Apollo moon landings. When President Obama started the commercial crew program in 2010, NASA estimated that it would take a certain amount of money to get government funded and commercially operated spacecraft running by 2015. Then the space agency would no longer be dependent on Russia for rides to the International Space Station.

Congress has decided to allocate less money than NASA feels it needed for commercial crew. This situation is not unusual, as Congress often does this to space projects. However, the politics surrounding the creation of the commercial crew program, which featured the abrupt cancellation of the Constellation space exploration program, has exacerbated the conflict between NASA's will and Congress' won't. President Obama did not consult Congress when he cancelled President Bush's return to the moon program. Congress has displeased ever since.
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Calls For Funding NASA Commercial Crew Grow

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @01:00AM (#50385679)

    Just sell NASA to private investors and rename it Weyland-Yutani Corp.

  • The Moon program (Score:5, Interesting)

    by khallow ( 566160 ) on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @01:09AM (#50385697)

    President Obama did not consult Congress when he cancelled President Bush's return to the moon program. Congress has displeased ever since.

    There are three things to observe about the above remark. First, there was no return to the moon program to cancel. Second, Congress cares far more about campaign contributions from Alliant Techsystems, the makers of the Shuttle Rocket Boosters or SRB, who collect considerable revenue from NASA for making an obsolete product. The whole funding cut for NASA's commercial crew program is just an attempt to eliminate competition to the Space Launch System (SLS), a costly boondoggle which is the latest incarnation of the big rocket program.

    Third, the article submitter is finally coming around to supporting commercial space. I told you so.

    • Re:The Moon program (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Required Snark ( 1702878 ) on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @02:17AM (#50385853)
      Right. It's the Congress critters owned by the United Launch Alliance that are holding up the funding. They would rather give nearly a billion dollars to prop up the Russian space program then let SpaceX get a lead on the current Boeing/Lockheed-Martin (ULA) monopoly.

      NASA gave Boeing $4.2 billion for it's CTS-100 crew system, and $2.6 billion to SpaceX for the Dragon. [space.com] Add in $900 million to the Russians to send US astronauts to the ISS and it's $3 billion extra to make sure that Boeing will remain the incumbent. And don't forget the the CTS-100 has never been launched, while the Dragon has been to the ISS multiple times.

      So even though ULA sat on their ass for decades and used Russian motors for their Atlas V [wikipedia.org] they are still the preferred vendor. So if you have enough clout in Congress and every manager in NASA and the Air Force knows they can spend their post-government career in a well paid civilian job at Boeing, you can sleep easy because the government will spend whatever it takes to keep you fat and happy.

      No capitalism in sight. It's the insiders giving each other hands jobs. Business as usual.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Psssst : SRB == Solid Rocket Booster

    • by jez9999 ( 618189 )

      First, there was no return to the moon program to cancel.

      Wait, what? [wikipedia.org] And the Constellation program sounds like a much better idea than pissing away money on a manned mission to Mars, anyway - a permanent Lunar colony? Much cooler idea and when expanded could even lead (ultimately) to tourism of the moon.

      • by khallow ( 566160 )
        Constellation didn't allocate money for any sort of lunar activities. It never got to the point where that would matter. It was only words then and only words now.
  • Perhaps it might have been a bit too hasty to kill off the Shuttle & friends since it means we have to hitch a ride with the Russians.

    At least it would make sense instead of waiting for a dressed up Apollo II craft.

    • by Michael Woodhams ( 112247 ) on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @02:03AM (#50385815) Journal

      For the cost of one shuttle launch you could more than pay for SpaceX's entire development program so far. For two launches you could pay for their development so far plus the extra they'll need to finish the Dragon capsule and "man-rate" the system, and still have some money left over for a couple of launches (each of which can carry as many crew as the shuttle.)

      (I'm taking the cost of a shuttle launch as about $1.5B [about.com]. Lower values can be argued for, adjust the above as needed for your preferred cost.)

      For a few more shuttle launches and a several year wait, Blue Origins would likely be able to field a man-rated rocket, if you want multiple space taxi companies to chose from. ULA could do it too, but that would probably cost you ten shuttle launches.

      The shuttle was hideously expensive and needed to go.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        The shuttle itself wasn't all that expensive to launch, I think some estimates put it at somewhere in the $200 million area for the ET, SRBs, fuel & labor. The $1.5 billion per launch was with all of the garbage that was attached to the shuttle because it was seen as a "can't fail" program. Things like grounds/building maintenance of most of Cape Canaveral , extensive wildlife programs, R&D of anything that got within a mile of the shuttle complex & a litany of research facilities spread throu

        • That's an important note, also, and had to do with the structure of the contracts.

          One of the ideas with the Space Shuttle was that there would always be a shuttle launch going on and contracts were designed accordingly. In 1985, there were 9 shuttle launches and during the height of the program there were 6-8 launches a year. So the costs of the staff to handle the shuttle from landing to loading to launch was a fixed cost. The fewer number of launches, the more each launch cost.

    • by khallow ( 566160 ) on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @03:06AM (#50385973)
      No, a really good time to kill the Shuttle would have been in 1990 when it was well determined that the Shuttle couldn't ever achieve its design goals and had lost most of its customers (DOD, commercial). $100 billion is a lot of money for some people.
    • The launch and maintenance costs for the shuttle were crippling NASA's ability to operate. It was a horribly expensive system regardless of whether it flew or sat on the ground. They had no choice but to kill it.
    • Not really.

      The Space Shuttle was awesome, but it was 10x more than we need and 10x more expensive to operate. If all we're doing is supplying crew, it's probably better to have a less expensive way to do it.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday August 25, 2015 @01:15AM (#50385717)

    KICKSTARTER TIME!

  • You want a space taxi? Well, if it's going to be anything like the German version [myvideo.de]...

    maybe the US version could be less embarrassing?

  • As long as NASA is seen be some in Congress as a way to funnel pork to Utah and Alabama, we're talking nothing but wasted effort.
    • They get lots of mandates from congress. Trouble is they tend change their mind faster than systems engineering development cycles. Then they get a requirement to integrate a boat trolling motor onto the first stage booster. Later a camper van must be retrofitted and attached to serve as crew quarters. After finally convincing Congress that the trolling motor requirement is making it hard to engineer the booster to meet mission objectives, Congress redirects them to swap the trolling motor for a 750HP o
  • These NASA programs are expensive, bloated drains on the economy. They attempt to accelerate technological development by brute force, slowing down wealth creation and making the nation as a whole poorer.

    I've suggested a Citizen's Dividend which, as a secondary effect, causes the wealth cycle to speed up: the expansion of niche markets and the creation of new markets occurs more rapidly, speeding up the creation of new jobs. It also has secondary effects such as freeing up the application of wealth to

    • 17% dividend of what? 17% of the GDP/person? Where would the money come from?

      • I'll try a moderately-long-winded explanation to avoid something frivolous and short.

        Back in 1950, the cost of our Welfare system--Social Security OASDI, food stamps, unemployment, housing assistance, the lot--was 1.5% of total IRS-reported adjusted gross income (AGI), including all business and individual income. That's the tax base. The system I describe would have cost 120%-135% to achieve what I want--that means it costs more than all the income in the United States.

        In 2013, the Welfare system reac

  • "Congress has displeased ever since." Yes, it certainly has, and not just on NASA funding.
  • The GOP, esp. the neo-con elements, are the ones working hard to kill off private space. IOW, it is a small faction of CONgress, and to be fair, it is a small CONTROLLING faction of the GOP that is really causing this.
    What I find interesting is that the neo-cons like Shelby, coffman, etc would rather pay Putin MULTIPLE BILLIONS, than pay American private space, 1 Billion. It speaks volumes about the GOP.

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