Author: Marcia Smith

2002 Futron Study One Basis of Optimism About Commercial Human Space Flight Says OSTP Staffer

2002 Futron Study One Basis of Optimism About Commercial Human Space Flight Says OSTP Staffer

White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) staff told the National Research Council (NRC) today that a 2002 study by Futron is one of three “data points” that the White House used in crafting its commercial crew strategy.

In response to a question as to what market analysis was done to demonstrate that there is a non-government market for sending people into space, OSTP staffer Rich Leshner told a joint meeting of the NRC’s Space Studies Board (SSB) and Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board (ASEB) that OSTP had three data points indicating there is “a chance for a market there”:

  • eight people have paid $25 million each to fly as tourists on Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft;
  • more than 100 non-U.S. astronauts have flown to low Earth orbit on U.S. or Russian spacecraft either paying in cash or “in kind” contributions; and
  • a 2002 Futron study combined with a poll by Zogby International looking at the U.S. market for orbital flights indicated there would be a “robust” market in 2020.

He did not address how relevant the Futron study would be today under the significantly changed economic circumstances since 2002. (Editor’s Note: The Futron study forecast that, for orbital flights, by 2021 “60 passengers may be flying annually, representing revenues in excess of US$300 million.”)

Mr. Leshner was part of a panel of OSTP and Office of Management and Budget (OMB) staff members discussing the FY2011 budget for NASA and NOAA at the SSB/ASEB meeting. Another panel member, OMB Branch Chief Paul Shawcross, stressed that the Constellation program was not “realistic” and since the International Space Station is “crucial,” he asked “what was the alternative?” In response to another question about when more details will be available, Mr. Shawcross said that NASA was working on them with input from the White House, but they are not yet ready to be released adding “there’s more out there already than people realize.”

A panel of House and Senate committee staff followed the White House panel. Richard Obermann, staff director of the House Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee of the House Science and Technology Committee, and Ed Feddeman, his Republican counterpart, both said that the committee’s February 25 hearing demonstrated that their members support the budget request for science, aeronautics and technology development, but not the human space flight component. Dr. Obermann quoted committee chairman Bart Gordon (D-TN) as saying that he was not certain there were sufficient votes in the committee to win approval for the President’s request. Dr. Feddeman stressed that not only were his members skeptical of the scant information the President provided about the plan, but they were offended by the fact that the White House provided advance information to select reporters while embargoing information to Congress.

Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee Republican staff member Jeff Bingham said that his committee had not yet had time to review the request other than for the human space flight component. He explained that the bill recently introduced by Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (S. 3068) was intended to stimulate discussion about those issues. He said the bill was not about extending the shuttle program for its own sake, but only if it is needed to ensure the International Space Station is sustainable through 2020.

Advice to Obama From Senator Bill Nelson

Advice to Obama From Senator Bill Nelson

Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL) offered President Obama a lot of advice about what he should say at the April 15 “space conference” the White House is planning for April 15 in Florida. In a speech on the Senate floor yesterday (pages S1254-1256), he reiterated many of the concerns he expressed during a Feburary 24 hearing. Basically he feels there are many good elements of the FY2011 budget request, but he faults the roll-out of the request as creating the misperception that President Obama is killing the U.S. human spaceflight program. He sees the April 15 conference as the President’s opportunity to clarify and amplify his position, for example by explcitly saying that human exploration of Mars is the goal, perhaps with intermediate stops along the way. He urges the President to:

“Stop listening just to the budget boys and OMB. Listen to the cries of an American people who once again want to be challenged and inspired, as President John F. Kennedy inspired the Nation and the Nation came together and did what was considered to be almost the impossible. It wasn’t impossible. It was extraordinary, and it was an American achievement..”

Maxim Tarasenko Essay Contest for 2010 Announced

Maxim Tarasenko Essay Contest for 2010 Announced

The quarterly journal Space Policy and the Secure World Foundation have announced the 2010 Maxim Tarasenko Essay Contest for law school students or graduate students in space policy for a publishable article on a topic of current debate. The contest offers a prize of 500, publication of the essay, a certificate, and a one year subscription to Space Policy. Essays are due to Frances Brown, editor of Space Policy, by December 31, 2010. Complete rules are available in the announcement. The contest honors Maxim Tarasenko, a highly respected Russian space policy analyst and member of Space Policy’s Editorial Board who tragically died in 1999.

Events of Interest: Week of March 8-12, 2010

Events of Interest: Week of March 8-12, 2010

The following events may be of interest in the coming week. For more information, check our calendar on the right menu or click the links below. Times, dates and witnesses for congressional hearings are subject to change; check the relevant committee’s website for up-to-date information. All meetings are in Washington, DC and all times are EST unless otherwise noted. Closed meetings and hearings are listed for informational purposes only.

Monday-Tuesday, March 8-9

  • NRC Space Studies Board and Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board, Keck Center, 500 5th Street, NW, Washington, DC
    • The two boards will meet jointly on March 8, some sessions are closed
    • The two boards will meet separately on March 9, some sessions are closed
    • SSB meeting continues on March 10, but is closed to the public

Monday-Thursday, March 8-11, Los Angeles, CA

Tuesday-Thursday, March 9-11, Greenbelt, MD

Tuesday, March 9

  • It’s closed to the public, but according to Congress Daily’s Daybook the House Appropriations Committee’s Select Intelligence Oversight Panel will hold a hearing on the National Reconnaissance Office budget, 5:00 pm, H405 Capitol. NRO Director Bruce Carlson is the witness. It is not listed on the committee’s website as of March 7.
  • Also closed, but listed on the House Intelligence Committee’s website, is a hearing on the Military Intelligence Program and Service Elements FY2011 Budget Request, 10:00 am, HVC-304 Capitol. Witnesses are listed on the committee’s website.

Wednesday, March 10

Thursday, March 11

  • This is closed, too but the House Intelligence Committee will hold a hearing on the National Intelligence Program and Military Intelligence Program FY2011 budget request, 9:30 am, HVC-304 Capitol. Director of Intelligence Dennis Blair and Defense Undersecretary for Intelligence James Clapper are the witnesses.
  • House Armed Services Defense Acquisition Reform Panel hearing on Managing the Defense Acquisition System and the Defense Acquisition Workforce, 3:00 pm, 2261 Rayburn House Office Building. This hearing is listed in Congress Daily’s Daybook, but is not on the committee’s website as of March 7.

Friday, March 12

Update: President Obama To Hold Space Summit in Florida on April 15

Update: President Obama To Hold Space Summit in Florida on April 15

UPDATE: The text of the White House announcement is now available on the White House website.

ORIGINAL STORY:

President Barack Obama will hold a “space summit” in Florida next month to explain his vision for NASA according to a White House statement quoted by the Associated Press today. The summit will be on April 15, probably near Kennedy Space Center, though the specifics have not been formally announced.

The President’s new plan for NASA, outlined in his FY2011 budget request, would cancel NASA’s Constellation program, which is intended to replace the space shuttle as the U.S. human space transportation system. The President’s plan instead would rely on foreign and as-yet-unproven domestic commercial crew launch services to take astronauts to and from the International Space Station. It also would fund technology development for future, undefined human space flight missions beyond low Earth orbit, as opposed to the Constellation program that is aiming to return humans to the Moon by 2020. The White House and NASA call the Constellation program unexecutable without significantly more funding ($5 billion a year more, according to NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver).

The President’s plan has been met primarily with skepticism, antagonism and outright anger from Democrats and Republicans in Congress and much of the aerospace workforce, especially in Florida. With the space shuttle scheduled to be terminated at the end of this year, some shuttle workers were to transition to the Constellation program. If that program is cancelled, the workforce impact could be severe.

The President’s plan does have some supporters. The White House included former astronaut Sally Ride in the roll out of the plan on February 1, along with letters from legendary Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin and Norm Augustine, who chaired a blue-ribbon panel last year that provided options for the future of the human space flight program. The Planetary Society has mounted a campaign to win support for it, and the President of the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA), Bill Smith, wrote a letter to the editor of the Washington Post supporting the FY2011 budget request because of its investment in space and earth science.

Only one Member of Congress has publicly spoken in favor of it, though — Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-CA), a long time advocate of commercial space activities. The FY2010 appropriations act that funded NASA included language prohibiting NASA from spending funds to cancel Constellation or begin a new program until Congress permits such action in a subsequent appropriations bill.

"NanoRack" Newest Commercial Innovation for ISS Utilization

"NanoRack" Newest Commercial Innovation for ISS Utilization

The next space shuttle mission will carry the first NanoRack to the International Space Station (ISS) for conducting small experiments relatively inexpensively. Developed by a self-financed partnership of the Kentucky space consortium, University of Kentucky, Morehead State University, and Belcan Corp., NanoRack builds on the Cubesat design and interfaces with the ISS power and data grid through a USB plug.

Jeff Manber, one of the earliest advocates of commercial space activities who may be best known in space circles for his work with MirCorp in the 1990s to find commercial opportunities for Russia’s Mir space station (which was deorbited in 2001), is one of the founders of NanoRacks. Manber now writes for Aviation Week & Space Technology’s blog and the magazine published a story about the upcoming flight. It explained that NanoRacks will fly on each of the remaining four shuttle missions, and is small enough to be taken to the ISS on Progress, ATV or HTV as well. Each NanoRack can accommodate up to 16 experiments with 5 volts of power and data delivery to Earth. According to the article, commercial customers will pay $50,000; educational customers (such as universities), $25,000.

Dick Covey to Leave USA Before Next Shuttle Launch

Dick Covey to Leave USA Before Next Shuttle Launch

Dick Covey, former astronaut and President and CEO of space shuttle operator United Space Alliance (USA), announced yesterday that he will retire from the company in three weeks. His departure on March 26 will be a week and a half before the next shuttle launch on April 5. No reason was given for the timing of his resignation and a replacement was not named. Former astronaut Dan Brandenstein is USA’s Chief Operating Officer. After the April 5 launch of STS-131, three more shuttle launches are scheduled before the program is terminated under the existing plan. As reported earlier, Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison has introduced legislation to continue shuttle flights after that time.

Bolden Reaffirms Support for FY2011 Budget Request; No "Plan B"

Bolden Reaffirms Support for FY2011 Budget Request; No "Plan B"

In a statement released late Thursday, NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden reaffirmed his commitment to the President’s FY2011 budget request following a Wall Street Journal article that publicized an internal NASA email that suggested NASA was developing a “Plan B.”

In the statement, Gen. Bolden said that he was “open to hearing ideas from any member of the NASA team, but I did not ask anybody for an alternative to the President’s plan and budget.”

Erin Conaton Confirmed as Air Force Under Secretary

Erin Conaton Confirmed as Air Force Under Secretary

The Senate finally confirmed Erin Conaton as the new Air Force Under Secretary. Her nomination and those of other Pentagon nominees had been blocked by Senator Richard Shelby (R-AL) because of the aerial refueling tanker controversy according to Congress Daily (subscription required). Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin (D-MI) threatened a procedural move that would have required Senator Shelby and other Senators blocking Pentagon nominations to explain their “holds” on the Senate floor so the holds were released, Congress Daily reported. Conaton’s was one of several Pentagon nominations approved tonight.

Garver: "We Knew That Change Would Be Difficult"

Garver: "We Knew That Change Would Be Difficult"

Speaking at a heavily attended breakfast meeting of Women in Aerospace, NASA Deputy Administrator Lori Garver projected confidence that as NASA continues to communicate with Congress about the change proposed in the FY2011 budget request they will see that it is “a good plan.”

“The President took on the status quo with his eyes wide open,” knowing that change always is difficult. He was willing to do that, she said, because of the importance he ascribes to NASA and the need for a “sustainable and affordable” way for the space program to move forward. Noting that the 5-year budget allocates $100 billion for NASA, she said President Obama “feels we can do better” and NASA is important enough to fight the battle. She stressed that the country’s elected leaders are making the decisions, starting with the President, and now Congress will evaluate his proposal.

She outlined the increases that the budget proposes for science, aeronautics, technology development, and education, but focused on the proposed cancellation of the Constellation program. Praising the Constellation workforce, she said that the Obama Administration had inherited a “system that made no sense to continue.” The Augustine Committee’s finding that NASA’s budget needed to increase by $3 billion for a successful human space flight program was not for continuing Constellation. She said keeping Constellation on a reasonable schedule would cost $5 billion more a year and the money just is not there. If Congress insists that Constellation continue, she asked, what will be cancelled in order to make that funding available?

In response to a question about how much it would cost to keep the space shuttle flying, she said that when she arrived at NASA she was told that the time to make such a decision already had passed so they had not looked at how much it would cost.

She emphasized that the commercial crew proposal is for “all our partners” in COTS, CCDEV, and Constellation. The main difference is that NASA will “loosen our grip a bit” through a different procurement mechanism than traditional programs like Constellation.

“This matters,” she said, calling on the aerospace community to “come together and work toward a common ground.”

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