Author: Marcia Smith

USGS Director: Landsat Has Many Fans, But Affordable Solution Needed for Future

USGS Director: Landsat Has Many Fans, But Affordable Solution Needed for Future

Marcia McNutt, Director of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), said today that the Obama Administration is “full of fans of Landsat,” but that an affordable solution must be found to continue this series of land remote sensing satellites.

McNutt spoke at a briefing on the FY2013 budget request for USGS, part of the Department of the Interior.   USGS is requesting $1.1 billion for FY2013, a $35 million increase over its FY2012 level.  The request includes $53.3 million for USGS activities related to operating and disseminating data from Landsat 5 and 7, the two satellites now in orbit, and developing the ground system for the next in the series, the Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM) or Landsat 8.  NASA is funding the development and launch of the LDCM spacecraft.  It is scheduled for launch in January 2013.

The pressing question is what comes next.  The Landsat user community has grown tremendously since the data were made available for free in 2008.   The medium resolution (30 meter and 15 meter) data from Landsat satellites have little commercial value compared to the high resolution (less than 1 meter) data available from companies like GeoEye and DigitalGlobe.  Nonetheless, the data are critical for many applications, especially in agriculture and land use studies.  The first Landsat (then called ERTS) was launched by NASA in 1972 and the resulting 40-year data-set is considered invaluable.  The Landsat program has endured a tumultuous programmatic history and survives largely because of a strong and vocal user base.

Users now are worried about a gap in data acquisition both between now and when Landsat 8 is operational because Landsat 5 and 7 are failing, as well as after Landsat 8 stops functioning.  Landsat 8 has a five-year design lifetime.  Landsat 5 and 7 have operated long past their design lifetimes, but users cannot bank on that happening with future satellites.  Landsat 5 was launched in 1984.  Its operations were suspended last fall after it experienced an electronics failure.   Landsat 7 was launched in 1999 and its data have been degraded since 2003 because of a failure in its scan line corrector

In the FY2012 budget request, the Obama Administration proposed transferring the entire Landsat program to USGS, which would take responsibility for developing requirements and funding development, launch, and operation of future satellites.  USGS is willing to take on the role, but Congress rejected the plan because of concerns about negative impacts on other parts of the USGS budget.  Congress gave USGS only $2 million in FY2012 for studies related to the next in the series, Landsat 9.

McNutt said that USGS is working with NASA, NOAA and the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) on how to craft an affordable program that would keep the Department of the Interior in the lead because “everyone is still convinced” USGS is the agency that best understands the user community.

For FY2013, however, USGS is not even requesting $2 million to keep level with FY2012.   At today’s budget briefing, Matt Larsen, Associate Director for Climate & Land Use Change, said that only “a quarter of a million” — $250,000 — is in the budget proposal for Landsat 9 studies.   USGS requested the National Research Council to conduct a study and make recommendations on how to implement a sustained land imaging program.  Larsen said that would be one input to deliberations among Administration stakeholders, but that it also will release a Request for Information to the Landsat community in the coming weeks.

FY2013 R&D Budget Request Material Posted on OSTP Website

FY2013 R&D Budget Request Material Posted on OSTP Website

The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) has posted information, including fact sheets, about the FY2013 budget request for research and development.  OSTP will hold a press conference that will be webcast at 1:30 pm today.

The website has the following documents:

Fact Sheets (all PDFs)

NASA Officials Cheer $17.7 Billion Request for FY2013

NASA Officials Cheer $17.7 Billion Request for FY2013

Leaks to the press last week about the broad outlines of NASA’s FY2013 budget request muted the official roll-out of the budget today, but it is now confirmed that NASA’s FY2013 request is $17.711 billion.  That is a slight decrease from its $17.800 enacted level for FY2012, but $1 billion less than NASA projected it would have a year ago. 

NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden and NASA Chief Financial Officer Beth Robinson briefed the overall budget this afternoon, followed by slightly more detailed briefings by the Associate Administrator (AA) for Human Exploration and Operations Bill Gerstenmaier, AA for Science John Grunsfeld, AA for Aeronautics Jaiwon Shin, and Chief Technologist Mason Peck.   All portrayed the budget in a positive light considering the country’s economic situation.  The top line budget numbers are: 

Science: $4.911 billion

  • Earth Science, $1.784 billion
  • Planetary Science, $1.192 billion
  • Astrophysics, $659 million
  • James Webb Space Telescope:  $628 million
  • Heliophysics, $647 million 

Aeronautics:  $552 million

Space Technology:  $699 million

Exploration:  $3.933 billion

  • Exploration Systems and Development (Orion and SLS): $2.769 billion
    • Space Launch System:  $1.340 billion 
    • Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle (Orion): $1.025 billion
    • Exploration Ground Systems:  $404.5 million
  • Commercial Spaceflight (commercial crew):  $830 million
  • Exploration Research and Development:  $334 million

Space Operations:  $4.013 billion

  • Space Shuttle:  $71 million
  • International Space Station:  $3.008 billion
  • Space and Flight Support:  $935 million

Education:  $100 million

Cross Agency Support:  $2.848 billion 

Construction and Environmental Remediation:  $619 million

Inspector General: $37 million

    Last year, the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) was separated from the rest of the astrophysics program because of management problems.  If the two amounts are added together, the astrophysics discipline is slated to get $1.287 billion.

    Robinson was careful to point out that the amount for the Space Launch System includes funds that are accounted for in the SLS line ($1.34 billion), part of the construction line ($140 million), and the exploration ground support line ($406 million).  All told, she said, the request for SLS is $1.885 billion.  SLS is a high priority for Congress, especially Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) who has fought for the program over the past two years.  In a press statement, she sharply criticized the request for cutting millions of dollars from SLS and Orion while asking for $830 million for commercial crew:  “The Administration remains insistent on cutting SLS and Orion to pay for commercial crew rather than accommodating both.”

    The future of the robotic Mars exploration program was a recurring theme of questions asked at the briefings.   NASA has informed the European Space Agency that it will not participate in two Mars missions in 2016 and 2018 respectively that had been a focus of NASA-ESA cooperation since 2009.   Bolden and Robinson played down the significance of the change in plans and frankly stated that the agency simply cannot afford another “flagship” mission at this time.   Flagships are the most expensive of the NASA categories of scientific spacecraft.  The agency just launched a Mars-bound flagship mission, the Mars Science Laboratory (or Curiosity), and is building another flagship — the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).   Questions about whether overruns on JWST caused the budget cut to the Mars program were deflected.   NASA officials insisted that the decrease in funding for planetary science from $1.5 billion to $1.2 billion is due to Curiosity’s launch and the impending launches of two other planetary missions (LADEE and MAVEN).  With the development phases of those spacecraft completed or coming to an end, reduced funding should be expected, they said.  

    Bolden made clear that NASA is not walking away from Mars exploration missions, but instead will develop an integrated strategy for Mars exploration that responds to the needs of both the Science Mission Directorate and the Human Exploration and Operations Mission Directorate.   He said that he has charged Grunsfeld, Gerstenmaier, Peck and NASA Chief Scientist Waleed Abdalati to come up with the integrated plan.   Grunsfeld said later that he is not ruling out a mission — not a flagship mission, but something smaller — for the 2018 opportunity.   The Earth and Mars are correctly aligned in their orbits around the Sun every 26 months to launch spacecraft and 2018 is a particularly good alignment — a “sweet spot” according to Grunsfeld.  He will be talking with the planetary science community to come up with new ideas on how to take advantage of it.

    Fundamentally, all the NASA officials were putting a positive spin on the budget request, insisting that a $17.7 billion request signals strong White House support for what NASA does even though it is less than the current level.   As was true last year, the White House allowed NASA to show its projected “out year” budget as remaining level for the next 5 years even though the White House’s own budget charts show a different picture.  Last year the White House numbers were lower than what NASA used; this year it is the reverse.  In the White House material, NASA’s budget would rise ever so slightly year by year beginning in FY2014, reaching $21.4 billion in 2022.  As everyone says, though, projections are just that, a notional idea of what the future may hold.

    White House: FY2013 Budget Supports Commitment to Three "Key" Science Agencies, NASA Not One of Them

    White House: FY2013 Budget Supports Commitment to Three "Key" Science Agencies, NASA Not One of Them

    President Obama’s FY2013 budget request for science and technology (S&T) and research and development (R&D) supports the Administration’s commitment to double the budgets for three “key” science agencies, a list that does not include NASA.

    Those three agencies are the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institute of Science and Technology (NIST), and the Office of Science in the Department of Energy (DOE/Science).   They will get a total of $13.1 billion, a 4.4 percent increase over FY2012, according to a White House fact sheet.

    The total FY2013 budget request is $3.8 trillion, of which $140.8 billion across the government is for R&D, an increase of 1.4 percent over FY2012.  OSTP says that includes a cut to defense-related development, but an increase for non-defense R&D of 5 percent over the FY2012 level.

    NASA’s budget request is $17.7 billion, a small decrease from its FY2012 appropriated level of $17.8 billion, but a substantial decrease from the projected level of $18.7 billion shown last year in NASA’s budget materials.    OSTP identifies $9.6 billion of NASA’s FY2013 budget request as R&D and that portion of NASA’s budget would get a 2.2 percent increase in FY2013. 

     

    Events of Interest: Week of February 13-18, 2012

    Events of Interest: Week of February 13-18, 2012

    The following events may be of interest in the coming week.  Click on the links below or on our right menu, or check our full calendar also on the right menu, for more details. 

    The House and Senate are both in session this week.  Times, dates and witnesses for congressional hearings are subject to change.  Check the relevant committee’s website for up to date information.

    During the Week

    Release of President Obama’s budget request for FY2013 will dominate conversation in Washington this week, even though many politicians and pundits already have declared it “dead on arrival.”   Champions of defense spending, for example, are criticizing the depth of proposed Pentagon cuts even as Republicans insist that the deficit must be dramatically reduced by cutting federal spending and not raising taxes.  The President’s Budget Request (PBR) does not reflect “sequestration,” the poison pill Congress and the White House included in the Budget Control Act last summer that would impose even more stringent cuts on both defense and non-defense discretionary spending.   The failure of last year’s congressional supercommittee to reach agreement on other methods of cutting the deficit officially meant that sequestration should be in effect, but no one at either end of Pennsylvania Avenue wants to swallow that pill.  Ignoring it appears to be the game plan of the moment.  The shrill partisan debate that characterized Washington last year seems destined to be repeated this year, amplified by election year politics.   What will happen to space program funding is anyone’s guess.  Nonetheless, release of the budget tomorrow is the opening shot of the FY2013 budget debate.  Many departments and agencies are holding briefings tomorrow or later in the week.  Noted below are those most strongly related to space policy.

    This is also the final week of the WRC-12 conference in Geneva, Switzerland.  The last week is usually the most interesting — where major deals are cut.  We’ll keep you posted of anything that might dramatically affect allocation of frequencies or orbital slots for satellites.

    Monday, February 13

    • President Obama speaks to students at Northern Virginia Community College about the FY2013 Budget Request, Annandale, VA, 11:00 am ET, officially kicking off this year’s debate
    • White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) and the Government Printing Office (GPO) release the FY2013 budget request at GPO, 11:15 am. 
    • OMB and other White House officials hold press conference on FY2013 budget request,  White House Eisenhower Executive Office Building, 12:30 pm ET
    • White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) briefing on R&D and STEM Education in the FY2013 budget request, AAAS auditorium, 1200 New York Avenue, N.W., 1:30-2:30 pm ET
    • NASA FY2013 budget briefing, NASA Headquarters, 2:00 pm ET, followed by individual teleconference briefings by the mission directorates and the chief technologist, see this NASA press release for details but HEOMD is at 3:30, SMD at 4:30, OCT at 5:15, and ARMD at 6:00).  NASA budget information will be posted on the NASA budget website at 1:00 pm ET.
    • DOD FY2013 budget briefing, the Pentagon, 2:00 pm ET, followed by individual briefings by the Army, Navy and Air Force (see this DOD press release for details but Air Force is at 4:45)
    • Kennedy Space Center Director Cabana available at KSC press site to discuss FY2013 budget request, Kennedy Space Center , FL, 4:15 pm ET

    Tuesday, February 14

    Wednesday, February 15

    Wednesday-Thursday, February 15-16

    Thursday, February 16

    Friday, February 17

    Friday-Saturday, February 17-18

    Aviation Week: NASA To Request $17.7 Billion for FY2013

    Aviation Week: NASA To Request $17.7 Billion for FY2013

    Officially, details about a President’s budget request are not supposed to be released by agencies prior to the White House giving the OK.  Except for the Department of Defense and perhaps some high level messages the White House wants to preview, that usually means waiting until the complete budget request for the entire federal government is released.  That event is scheduled for Monday, but information about what the request proposes for NASA has been leaking out.   Aviation Week reveals today that the total NASA request will be $17.711 billion.

    Frank Morring writes today that the request is “only an $89 million cut,” but ends NASA’s plans to participate in a robotic Mars mission with the European Space Agency (ESA).  The impact of the FY2013 budget request on NASA-ESA Mars cooperation was publicized by the Washington Post yesterday, but that article did not include the total request for NASA.

    While $17.711 billion is a small cut from what the agency received from Congress in FY2012, it is a substantial cut from the funding level that the Obama Administration projected for NASA last year.   NASA’s FY2012 appropriated level is $17.800 billion, so by comparison the cut is indeed modest.   In last year’s budget request, however, the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) projected that NASA would get $18.030 billion in FY2013.  The White House allowed NASA to use higher projected spending levels in its own budget materials, keeping the agency level at $18.7 billion through FY2016.  So a $17.711 billion request can be interpreted as a small cut of $89 million from its current level, or a huge cut of $1 billion from NASA’s own projections a year ago at this time.

    Agencies like NASA that conduct multi-year research and development projects benefit from having an idea of what to expect in the future so they can effectively plan their programs.  While any future year projection is just that, a projection not a promise, when it varies significantly from reality, the planning process becomes inefficient.

    Aviation Week published additional details about the FY2013 budget request, which it says includes $830 million for commercial crew, $1.8 billion for the Space Launch System, $1 billion for the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, $3 billion for the International Space Station, $699 million for space technology development, and $500 million for aeronautics.  The total amount for science is not mentioned, only the $300 million cut to the planetary science program (from $1.5 billion to $1.2 billion according to yesterday’s story in the Post).

    The administration’s budget request is the first step in a lengthy process to determine how much the government can spend in FY2013.  The new fiscal year starts on October 1, but few expect Congress to complete action on budgets before then.  Meeting that October 1 deadline is a difficult task every year and especially challenging in an election year. 

    Editor’s Note:  It is interesting to observe that some members of the media are getting access to the NASA budget material on a non-embargoed basis prior to Monday’s release.  NASA had scheduled a meeting this afternoon where media representatives could learn about the budget if they agreed to an embargo where nothing could be published before Monday.   That embargoed briefing was canceled about two hours before it was scheduled to occur.  One cannot help but wonder who is leaking the information to favored publications without restrictions.  The obvious intent of the Washington Post story yesterday was to rally support for the Mars exploration program.  Today’s story in Aviation Week does not seem to have a bias, but does portray the cuts to NASA overall as being far less dramatic and may assuage some concerns.

    Looking for Something to Read This Weekend?

    Looking for Something to Read This Weekend?

    It’ll be a cold weekend — in Washington, at least.   If you plan to curl up in front of the fireplace and read a good book, forget the novels!  Here are two reports and a book we recently posted to our “Top Picks” and “Other Reports of Interest” lists (on our left menu).

    Reports: Planetary Science to Take Hit in New Budget

    Reports: Planetary Science to Take Hit in New Budget

    Rumors ahead of the release of the FY2013 budget request paint a gloomy picture for NASA’s planetary science program.   The Washington Post reports today that the budget request will drop from $1.5 billion to $1.2 billion for FY2013 with additional cuts in later years.

    NASA planetary science division director Jim Green has hinted as recent meetings of the NASA Advisory Council’s (NAC’s) planetary science subcommittee that such cuts were more than likely.  Without getting into specifics — which is officially prohibited prior to the President releasing the budget request — Green alerted the planetary science community that it had to make its case as to why planetary science is important to the nation.

    The story in the Washington Post this morning suggests that the community got the message.  It quotes Jim Bell, a member of that subcommittee and President of The Planetary Society, calling the proposed cuts “devastating ” to U.S. robotic Mars exploration plans.  Scott Hubbard, a member of the parent NAC Science Committee and who was NASA’s first Mars program director and later Director of NASA’s Ames Research Center, went further:  “It’s a scientific tragedy and a national embarrassment.” 

    Such cuts would impact not only the U.S. program, but Europe’s.   In 2009, NASA and the European Space Agency signed what was thought to be a revolutionary international cooperation agreement where the two agencies essentially merged their Mars exploration programs.   Instead of cooperating on a mission-by-mission basis, now the programs themselves would be merged to get the most payoff from investments on both sides of the Atlantic.   

    Early indications last fall that the budget outlook was dimming led NASA to pull back from committing to the next two merged missions — in 2016 and 2018 — that themselves were just the first in a string of missions with the ultimate goal of returning samples from Mars.   ESA’s science director Alvaro Gimenez told the BBC earlier this week that it had been told NASA participation in the missions had become “very unlikely.”   ESA is also talking to Russia about cooperating on those missions.  Russia’s Mars probe, Phobos-Grunt, was lost last fall because of computer design and programming errors. 

    The Washington Post quotes Rep. John Culberson (R-TX), a member of the House appropriations subcommittee that funds NASA, as condemning the proposed cut and asserting it will not be approved by Congress.    Those comments, however, illustrate the painful choices that will have to be made not only in FY2013 but for the rest of the decade to reduce the deficit, especially if the reduction must be accomplished only through spending cuts, as the Republicans insist, and not with revenue increases.    At the moment, influential Senators and the Obama Administration apparently have agreed that the top science priority for NASA is completing the over-budget James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), not planetary exploration.   The planetary program is just one of five divisions within NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.  JWST was separated from the rest of NASA’s astrophysics division last year to improve management of the program, so planetary science must compete for resources with JWST, the rest of astrophysics, heliophysics, and earth science.   The planetary program itself must choose priorities among Mars and the rest of the solar system.  

    Choosing science priorities is only the first step.   Prioritizing NASA’s science programs versus human exploration and aeronautics is another level of decision-making, then NASA versus other agencies in the same appropriations bill (including the Department of Commerce and its weather satellite activities, the Department of Justice, and the National Science Foundation), and then all of those against the rest of domestic discretionary spending.

    The FY2013 budget request will be released on Monday.   NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden will participate in a press conference at NASA Headquarters at 2:00 pm that day, which will be webcast on NASA TV.

     

     

    LightSquared Gets Pounded Again at Another Congressional Hearing

    LightSquared Gets Pounded Again at Another Congressional Hearing

    Potential interference between LightSquared’s satellite-terrestrial mobile broadband system and GPS was the subject of yet another congressional hearing today.  Numerous hearings were held last year in a variety of House committees, each warning of calamitous consequences if LightSquared is allowed to implement its system.   Today’s hearing before the House Transportation and Infrastructure (T&I) committee was no different.

    The hearing comes less than two weeks after the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued its most recent directive about LIghtSquared.  Noting that the FY2012 Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act  (part of the FY2012 Consolidated Appropriations Act) prohibits the FCC from allowing LightSquared to proceed until “concerns of potential widespread harmful interference” are resolved, the FCC declined to grant a request from LightSquared to make a declaratory ruling that GPS devices are not protected against harmful interference as long as LightSquared abides by the FCC’s technical parameters. 

    The company launched a high powered satellite, SkyTerra, in 2010 to use in a mobile broadband system, but requested permission from the FCC to augment the satellite capacity with a network of 40,000 terrestrial cell towers — an Ancillary Technical Component (ATC) in FCC terminology.  In January 2011, the FCC gave LightSquared provisional permission to proceed with the ATC, but the provision was that it had to form a technical committee to perform tests to determine the extent to which interference with GPS would occur.  The radio frequency bands assigned to LightSquared are adjacent to some of the GPS bands.

    The 2011 FCC decision prompted an outcry from GPS user communities.  Tests conducted by the FCC-required technical committee demonstrated that interference would indeed be a problem.  LightSquared modified its plans and also complained that it has complied with all of the FCC’s technical requirements.  It asserts that the interference is the fault of GPS receiver manufacturers who did not properly design the receivers.

    Another round of tests was ordered last fall, but the results were similar.  On January 13, 2012, the government’s National Space-Based PNT (Positioning, Navigation and Timing) Advisory Board, which is playing a leading role in opposing LightSquared’s plans, sent a letter to the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) stating its “unanimous conclusion … that both LightSquared’s original and modified plans … would cause harmful interference to many GPS receivers.”   NTIA, part of the Department of Commerce, oversees government use of radio frequencies, while the FCC governs their use by the private sector.

    LightSquared complained that the tests were “rigged.”  It called on NTIA and the FCC to conduct another round of tests and for “fair and transparent oversight of the testing process….”

    Aviation interests have been particularly vocal in opposing LightSquared because GPS is widely used in the aviation industry.  At today’s hearing before the aviation subcommittee of the House T&I committee, Deputy Secretary of Transportation John Porcari said no further testing was warranted at this time.   He added that the most recent tests were independently reviewed by Idaho National Lab and MIT Lincoln Lab.   Expanding broadband access to more Americans is a major goal of the Obama Administration, he said, but LightSquared is incompatible with “FAA requirements for low-altitude operations” near LightSquared transmitters.  Noting that the FAA had already spent over $2 million in testing and analyzing LightSquared’s proposal, he argued that further government investment “cannot be justified at this time.”

    Other witnesses at the hearing represented the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), a U.N. specialized agency that sets global standards and regulations for aviation safety; the Air Transport Association; the Air Line Pilots Association; the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association; Garmin AT, Inc.; and George Washington University. 

     

    AIA: U.S. Lost Thousands of Jobs, Billions of Dollars Because of Export Law

    AIA: U.S. Lost Thousands of Jobs, Billions of Dollars Because of Export Law

    The Aerospace Industries Association (AIA) released a new report and several fact sheets today about the negative impact of U.S. export controls on that industry.  AIA concludes that changes made in 1999 that put all satellites and their components on the U.S. Munitions List cost the satellite manufacturing industry $20.8 billion between 1999 and 2009, which translates into 27,893 jobs lost annually during that time period.

    AIA released its most recent report on the impact of export controls on the aerospace industry and the satellite industry-specific fact sheets in conjunction with a House Foreign Affairs Committee hearing on export reform.  AIA’s President, Marion Blakey, testified along with Patricia Cooper, President of the Satellite Industry Association (SIA).

    As they have for many years, the two associations recounted the loss of global market share for U.S. companies since the late 1990s when Congress dictated that all satellites and their components be treated as munitions under U.S. export laws.  Congress acted in the wake of an investigation that concluded U.S. satellite manfacturing companies aided the development of China’s launch vehicles, close cousins of missiles with their obvious national security implications.  At the time, U.S.-made satellites could be exported to China for launch.  After several Chinese launch vehicle failures where U.S.-built satellites were lost, satellite manufacturers Loral and Hughes (now Boeing) aided China in its accident investigations, but did not adhere to the export control restrictions in place at the time.

    The so-called Cox Committee, chaired by then-Rep. Christopher Cox (R-CA) investigated the Loral-Hughes incident.  Its findings led to language in the FY1999 National Defense Authorization Act (P.L. 105-261) placing satellites and their components on the U.S. Munitions List of items whose exports are controlled by the State Department.

    For most of the 1990s, commercial communications satellites were under the jurisdiction of the dual-use Commerce Control List administered by the Department of Commerce.  The Cox committee and the new law changed that.   No U.S. satellites, or satellites containing U.S. components, can be exported to China now under the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR).  European satellite manufacturers have used the opportunity to build “ITAR-free” satellites that can be exported to China for launch, an advantage for satellite owners who thus can take advantage of China’s relatively low launch prices.

    Ordinarily the Executive Branch determines what items are on each list, and SIA’s Patricia Cooper testified today that her organization wants that responsibility returned to the Executive Branch. “Satellites are the only category of products mandated by Congress for blanket treatment as munitions….SIA asks that Congress remove this blanket requirement and restore Executive Branch authority over regulation of satellite export controls,” she said.

     At the same time, she insisted that the satellite industry is not seeking any changes in how exports to China are handled:  “Further, SIA and its members do not seek any legislative erosion of safeguards already in place that have effectively prohibited satellite technology exports to China.”