Category: International

Another Proton Launch Anomaly Added to the List

Another Proton Launch Anomaly Added to the List

As Russia continues to mull restructuring its space program in the wake of an unusual number of launch mishaps over the past two years, they now have one more to cope with.   International Launch Services (ILS) revealed that yesterday’s Proton launch of a Yamal communications satellite went awry and left the satellite in an improper orbit.  Another failure of the Proton’s Briz-M upper stage appears to be the culprit.

The Yamal 402 satellite, built by Thales Alenia for Russia’s OAO Gazprom Space Systems (part of Russia’s Gazprom energy giant) may yet reach its designated orbit according to a statement from Khrunichev State Research and Production Space Center, which builds both Proton and Briz-M.  In a statement issued yesterday, ILS and Khrunichev said that the fourth and final burn of the Briz-M upper stage engine ended four minutes early.  In a second statement today, Khrunichev said “two additional burns of the propulsion system will be required,” with the first scheduled for “Sunday-early Monday” local time in Russia.

A Russian state commission will investigate what went wrong.  Even if the satellite eventually reaches its intended orbit, the mishap is another complication in restoring confidence in Russian launch vehicles.   The run of bad luck began exactly two years ago in December 2010.

  • December 2010, Proton-Block DM, upper stage failure, three Russian GLONASS navigation satellites lost
  • February 2011, GEO-IK2, Rokot-Briz, upper stage failure, Russian geodetic satellite stranded in transfer orbit
  • August 2011, Ekspress AM-4, Proton-Briz, upper stage failure, Russian communications satellite stranded in transfer orbit
  • August 2011, Progress M-12M, Soyuz U-Fregat, third stage failure due to clogged fuel line, Russian cargo spacecraft for International Space Station lost
  • November 2011, Phobos-Grunt, Zenit-Fregat, upper stage failure, Russian Mars-bound spacecraft stranded in Earth orbit
  • December 2011, Soyuz 2.1a, third stage failure, Russian Meridian military communication satellite lost
  • August 2012, Proton-Briz, upper stage failure, Russian Ekspress-MD2 and Indonesian Telkom-3 communications satellites stranded in transfer orbit
  • December 2012, Proton-Briz, upper stage failure, Russian Yamal 402 communications satellite delivered to wrong orbit.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev are vowing to make changes to Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos, and its space industry.    The head of Khrunichev resigned in August one day after Medvedev met with Cabinet and space industry officials.   More recently, the head of the company that builds the GLONASS navigation satellites — a particular interest of President Putin — left his job after investigators determined that the company embezzled about $200 million of federal funding for the navigation satellite system.   More changes are expected

 

Events of Interest: Week of December 10-14, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of December 10-14, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the week ahead.  The House and Senate will be in session.

During the Week

The House Science, Space and Technology Committee will hold a hearing on Wednesday on the future of NASA.  The witnesses offer an interesting assortment of backgrounds. 

  • Bob Walker, a former Republican Congressman who once chaired this committee, is now a prominent Washington lobbyist with the firm Wexler & Walker.   Walker has been an advocate for a strong, forward looking civil space program for many, many years, and chaired the 2001 Commission on the Future of the U.S. Aerospace Industry.  He is on the Board of Advisers of Golden Spike Co., which debuted last week as a company offering two-person trips to the lunar surface and back for $1.4 billion per mission.
  • Ron Sega, a retired Air Force Major General and former astronaut with a long career in both military and civil space, is testifying as vice chair of the National Research Council (NRC) committee that issued its report on NASA’s strategic direction last week.
  • Thomas Zurbuchen, a space scientist from the University of Michigan, was vice chair of another recently-released NRC report — the Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics.
  • Marion Blakey is a former FAA Administrator who now leads the Aerospace Industries Association, which is intently focused on the dire consequences for the aerospace industry if sequestration goes into effect.
  • Scott Pace, currently Director of the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University, was NASA’s Associate Administrator for Program Analysis and Evaluation when Mike Griffin was Administrator and closely involved in developing the Constellation program.  He chaired the space policy team for Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign.

Also on tap this week are negotiations over a final version of the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) and, perhaps, a bill to give NASA another INKSNA waiver and extend third party liability indemnification for commercial launch service companies.  Amendments proposed to the Senate version of the NDAA for INKSNA and liability were not considered, so separate legislation is now in the works.  Most of those negotiations undoubtedly will be behind the scenes

And, of course, there might be news on the fiscal cliff situation.   President Obama and House Speaker John Boehner (R-OH) are the key negotiators on that as the days tick down to the end of the year.  Spending cuts and tax increases will automatically take effect at that point unless Congress passes and the President signs new legislation to delay or change current law.  All federal activities, including national security and civil space programs, could be affected if the country stays on the current course.

Here is the full list of space policy-related events that we know about.   Feel free to send us information on anything we missed.

Monday, December 10

Tuesday, December 11

Wednesday, December 12

Editor’s Note:  This article was updated Dec. 10 to add the information about Bob Walker serving on the Board of Advisors of Golden Spike.

North Korea May Postpone Its Rocket Launch

North Korea May Postpone Its Rocket Launch

North Korea announced today that it may postpone its rocket launch that it was planning for sometime this month.   No reason was given for the potential delay.

The Washington Times quotes a North Korean spokesman as saying that the country’s scientists and technicians are “seriously examining” a change to the launch date “for some reasons.”  Those reasons were not further explained.

North Korea’s three attempts to launch satellites to date have failed.  The most recent was in April and attempting another launch so soon after that failure was unexpected.   North Korea’s leaders reportedly wanted to launch in December to honor the first anniversary of the death of their leader, Kim Jong Il.   His son, Kim Jong Un, is now the country’s leader.

The United States condemned the April launch and this one because they violate United Nations Security Council resolutions, calling them “highly provocative.”  Other countries, including Russia and China, also expressed concern about the upcoming launch.  South Korea, in particular, was alarmed, especially considering that its presidential election will be held on December 19 where relations with North Korea are a key campaign issue.

FY2013 NDAA Passes Senate Without INKSNA, Liability, Orion/SLS, or Export Control Reform

FY2013 NDAA Passes Senate Without INKSNA, Liability, Orion/SLS, or Export Control Reform

The Senate passed the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) by a vote of 98-0 on Tuesday.    Amendments that could have affected NASA, FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation, and export controls of commercial satellites were never considered.  The bill does, however, retain provisions affecting national security space programs approved by the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) when it reported the bill in June.

The text of the final Senate version of the bill is published in the December 5, 2012 Congressional Record.  The Senate bill, S. 3254, was subsequently passed again as an amendment to the House bill (H.R. 4310), which passed the House and was sent to the Senate in May.   That is the first legislative step in enabling the two sides to conference on a compromise version to send to the President.

Senators Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX) and Bill Nelson (D-FL) had amendments that would have extended the FAA’s authority to indemnify commercial space launch companies against third-party claims for another two years and extended a waiver for NASA from the Iran, North Korea, Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA) limitations on contracting with Russia for services related to the International Space Station.  The Hutchison amendment also would have directed NASA on how to allocate funds for the Space Launch System and Orion.   Neither made it to the Senate floor for debate and the two Senators subsequently introduced compromise language as S. 3661, which keeps open the option for additional legislative action before Congress adjourns later this month.   The House already passed a bill to extend the indemnification authority (H.R. 6586).

Senator Michael Bennet (D-CO) had an amendment to ease export controls for commercial satellites, but that also was not brought up for debate.  The House-passed version of the NDAA already has language on this topic, so a compromise version could be negotiated during conference.

Although those issues were not included, the final Senate version of the bill retained provisions included by the Senate Armed Services Committee related to space activities.  For example, Sec. 912 gives the Department of Defense (DOD) flexibility in making cooperative arrangements with commercial space launch companies and public-private partnerships pertaining to space transportation infrastructure.  The objectives of the section including maximizing private sector use of DOD space transportation infrastructure, reducing the costs of services provided by DOD at launch support and space recovery support facilities, and enabling “covered entities” — non-Federal entities organized under U.S. law that engage in commercial space activities — to invest in DOD’s space transportation infrastructure.

Another section requires DOD to develop schedules for major satellite acquisition programs that integrate the schedules for the satellite and its ground systems.   The final Senate version of the bill also keeps language authorizing an additional $125 million to keep both commercial satellite imagery companies, GeoEye and DigitalGlobe, in business.  The National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) made clear earlier this year that it plans to fund only one company.  GeoEye and DigitalGlobe consequently announced plans to merge, a decision that is currently under review by the Department of Justice’s (DOJ’s) Antitrust Division.  DOJ requested additional information from the companies in September.

Experts Outline Plethora of Issues Facing the Second Obama Administration

Experts Outline Plethora of Issues Facing the Second Obama Administration

As a group of experts demonstrated at a panel discussion in Washington, D.C. yesterday, there is no shortage of pressing space policy challenges facing the second Obama Administration. The problem is choosing just which ones to tackle first.

SpacePolicyOnline Founder and Editor Marcia Smith kicked off the panel, which was convened by the Secure World Foundation (SWF), by laying out a series of challenges in the civil national and international spheres, including the budget shortfall, the future of Landsat beyond the launch of the Landsat Data Continuity Mission in February 2013, as well as persisting uncertainty over NASA priorities. Yet, Smith emphasized that in order to be successful in addressing any of these, there is a need to improve on an underlying aspect of the relationship between key stakeholders: trust.

Not only features of what has been a turbulent relationship between the Executive Branch and Congress during the first Obama Administration, mistrust and unease permeate on a larger scale between the United States and its international partners.  The U.S. decision to pull out of the joint U.S.-European  robotic Mars mission called ExoMars is a perfect example, Smith explained. Even though Europe remains interested in cooperating with the United States – something which “amazes me,” she said – rebuilding U.S. credibility as a reliable partner will be key moving forward.

While export control reform was not the top priority in Patricia Cooper’s list of key issues facing the commercial space sector, the outcome of key regulatory issues seemed the focal point for this community. Cooper, president of the Satellite Industry Association, listed on-orbit safety, hosted payloads, export control reform (or ITAR) and spectrum management as the main challenges. At the root of several of these issues is how the U.S. military, which depends on commercial satellite telecommunications to carry out its missions, will interact with the private sector to resolve these issues.  For example, improving on-orbit safety through increased space situational awareness (SSA) has been a priority for the private sector, leading to the establishment of the Space Data Association (SDA). Yet the degree of acceptance of this initiative by the U.S. military – particularly Strategic Command – is still an open question.

For his part, Brian Weeden, SWF Technical Advisor, highlighted the importance of improving SSA and the challenges the U.S. military faces in doing so, as captured in his recent report: “Going Blind: Why America is on the verge of Losing its Situational Awareness in Space and What Can be done About it.” Weeden noted that while the U.S. Air Force has made progress increasing its SSA capabilities, such as through the now operational Space Based Space Surveillance satellite launched in 2010 – the processing of the data produced by these systems as they come online is still a critical “choke point.” As described in the report, Weeden said that the “material, cultural and bureaucratic shackles” of the U.S. Air Force prevent it from developing a solution to this problem by itself. Instead, the U.S. military should adopt a more open approach to developing standards and capabilities and grow its community of stakeholders.

Wrapping up the panel was Eligar Sadeh, president of Astroconsulting International who outlined the key points in a recent SWF-funded effort to advance strategic thinking with respect to space and which led to a book he edited entitled Space Strategy in the 21st Century.  Sadeh explained that a successful, comprehensive strategy could not only help fulfill policy, but also connect ways to means, two persisting issues prevalent in the space arena. He added that such a strategy can help better coordinate space activities as well as begin to address the issues identified by the panel.  In describing the findings of the experts contained in the book, Sadeh noted the requirements to advancing strategic thinking: top-level political will, the establishment of a process to think strategically, and the ready availability of trained and competent strategists.

Audience interaction with the panel proved that even more issues are of concern to the community, such as the status of efforts to establish an international space code of conduct, and the complex relationship with China. While the exercise may have frustrated someone’s interest to come away with a list of top five issues to watch in space, it instead confirmed what Smith said at the beginning of the panel: “we [the space community] will continue to be very busy in the next four years.”

Events of Interest: Week of December 2-7, 2012 — UPDATE 2

Events of Interest: Week of December 2-7, 2012 — UPDATE 2

UPDATE 2:  The NRC moved the release time of its NASA Strategic Directions report on Dec. 5 from 11:00 to 11:30 am ET and added a telephone news conference with its chair, Al Carnesale.   This article has been updated accordingly.

UPDATE:  Adds the Golden Spike Company Debut press conference on Dec. 6.

The following events may be of interest in the coming week.   The House and Senate are in session for at least part of the week.

During the Week

This is quite a busy week.  Among the highlights are the following:  

  • The American Geophysical Union (AGU) fall meeting takes place in San Francisco with a number of town hall meetings, public lectures and press conferences about discoveries from space science missions, including a public lecture today (Sunday) at noon PT (3:00 pm ET) and press conference on Monday (9:00 am PT; noon ET) about Mars Curiosity. Everyone wants to know what Curiosity did or did not find — not life, not organics, NASA’s now made that clear. 
  • The Senate is expected to complete debate on the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act — on which at least three important amendments affecting NASA and export control policy are pending.  Debate began last Wednesday and they are hoping to wrap things up on Monday, though that depends on what deals could be made over this weekend to dispose of the hundreds of pending amendments.  Senators Hutchison and Nelson each have amendments to extend launch liability indemnification and give NASA another waiver from the Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act (the two would deal with that issue differently).  The Hutchison amendment also would require NASA to allocate money to the SLS/Orion program in FY2014 and FY2015 in the same proportion of the Exploration budget as in FY2013.  The Bennet amendment would ease export control regulations for commercial satellites.
  • On Monday, the Secure World Foundation will hold a panel discussion on space policy issues facing the Obama Administration in the second term.  (In the interest of full disclosure, I am one of the panelists.)
  • On Tuesday and Wednesday, two reports will be released with recommendations on NASA’s future. 
    • On Tuesday at 11:30 am ET, the Space Foundation will release its report PIONEERING:  Sustaining U.S. Leadership in Space, in 253 Russell Senate Office Building (note the time change, the briefing starts at 11:30 instead of noon; doors open at 11:00).
    • On Wednesday at 11:30 am ET the National Research Council will publicly release the report of its study committee on NASA’s Strategic Direction. (In the interest of full disclosure, I am a member of this committee and am posting this notice with NRC permission).
  • On Thursday, the 7th Eilene M. Galloway Symposium on Critical Issues in Space Law will be held at the Cosmos Club in Washington, DC.   This year’s topic is Regional and Global Space Organizations and Law, and the keynote speaker is NASA’s Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations Bill Gerstenmaier.

And those are just some of the meetings.  The full list is below.  Note that the House Science, Space and Technology Committee’s hearing on NASA’s Strategic Direction that was scheduled for December 6 has been postponed because the House leadership decided late last week that the House will not be in session on Thursday.  A new date has not yet been announced.

Sunday, December 2

Monday, December 3

Tuesday, December 4

Wednesday, December 5

Thursday, December 6

Friday, December 7

Nelson, Hutchison Differ on INKSNA Solution for NASA

Nelson, Hutchison Differ on INKSNA Solution for NASA

Senator Bill Nelson (D-FL) and Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-TX), long-standing partners on most issues concerning NASA programs, have amendments pending to the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (S. 3254) with different solutions to NASA’s need for a waiver from the Iran-North Korea-Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA).  The Senate plans to resume debate on the bill tomorrow.

The purpose of INKSNA is to incentivize Russia to stop providing nuclear, chemical or biological weapons technologies to Iran, North Korea and Syria.   It is major issue, but many wonder how NASA got in the middle of it.

When the law was first passed in 2000 as the Iran Nonproliferation Act (INA) there were allegations that Russia’s space agency, then headed by Yuri Koptev, was violating the Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR).  The MTCR is an international agreement that seeks to stem the transfer of ballistic missile technology. Getting Russia to adhere to it was one of the reasons the United States invited Russia to join the ISS program in the first place.  When the INA was being marked up by the House Science Committee in July 1999, then-chairman Jim Sensenbrenner (R-WI) said:  “Earlier this year, there were publications of the fact that entities of the Russian Space Agency were violating the MTCR.  That’s why there is Section 6 in this bill.”

Section 6 prohibits the U.S. government from making “extraordinary payments” to Russia related to ISS after January 1, 1999 unless the President determines and certifies to Congress that Russia is not transferring weapons of mass destruction or missile systems to Iran (or Syria or North Korea as the Act was later amended).  The term extraordinary payments is defined in section 7 (1) of the law (50 U.S.C. 1701).

The White House has not been willing to make that certification.   That is a problem for NASA because it needs certain services from Russia in order for the ISS program to continue, for example crew transportation and “lifeboat” services.   Consequently, NASA has required waivers from the law in order to enter into contracts with Russia for those services.   Congress agreed to pass waivers in 2005 and 2008.  The 2008 waiver allows NASA to contract for services that will be provided through July 1, 2016. 

With the decision to keep the ISS operating through 2020, however, NASA will require those services beyond 2016 and therefore needs another waiver.  Although some of the commercial crew companies say they will be ready to transport astronauts to the ISS by 2015 or 2016, NASA is planning on 2017, so needs to contract with Russia for additional crew transportation services.    It also is not clear if any of the U.S. commercial companies will be able to provide lifeboat services.  To do so, the spacecraft would have to designed to be able to remain docked to the ISS for many months, like Russia’s Soyuz, so crews can evacuate in an emergency.

The Hutchison amendment (SA 3078) would simply extend the time period and allow NASA to contract for services that would be provided through December 31, 2020.  The Nelson amendment (SA 3267), by contrast, would change the definition of “extraordinary payments” by deleting subsection (7(1)(B)) that applies to contracting for services after January 1, 1999.  Under his amendment, the U.S. government would be prohibited only from paying Russia for any work that Russia had previously agreed to provide at its expense (the first part of the definition).

The Nelson approach would solve the problem permanently, but the ongoing geopolitical situations with Iran and Syria may make it difficult to win support.  NASA is anxious to obtain the waiver soon because it estimates that it takes about three years to negotiate contracts with Russia and it then takes about 24 months to build Soyuz spacecraft.

Separately, both the Hutchison and Nelson amendments would extend third party launch liability indemnification for commercial launch service companies for two more years.  The Hutchison amendment also has a section that would require NASA to fund the SLS/Orion program in FY2014 and FY2015 at the same proportional level of the Exploration budget as those programs receive in FY2013.   The Nelson amendment does not address that issue.

The number of amendments to S. 3254 is currently up to 366, but Senators and their staffs were expected to work through this weekend to determine how many of those really need to be brought to the floor for debate.   The Senate is expected to resume debate on S. 3254 at 2:00 pm ET Monday.  The House passed its version of the bill in May.   Once it passes the Senate, the two will have to reach agreement on a final version.

 

Data on New Japanese Rocket Reportedly Stolen by Computer Virus

Data on New Japanese Rocket Reportedly Stolen by Computer Virus

The New York Times and other news sources are reporting that the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) revealed on Friday that a computer virus was used to steal information about its new Epsilon rocket.

Epsilon is a three-stage solid propellant rocket that JAXA is developing for launching payloads up to 1200 kilograms into low Earth orbit.   It uses the first stage of the H-IIA rocket and an upgraded version of the M-V upper stage for the second and third stages.  One goal is to reduce the cost and complexity of rocket launches, including dramatically reducing the time needed for ground operations and introducing the concept of “mobile launch control.”   JAXA’s Epsilon website states that “through [the] internet, we will be able to check and control rockets anywhere in the world simply by using a laptop computer.  We are planning to realize the world, where the launch control system is not necessarily at the launch site anymore.”  The first launch is expected in 2013.

The New York Times reports that JAXA discovered on November 21 that a desktop computer at its Tsukuba Space Center was infected with a vrius that was collecting data about Epsilon and transmitting it externally.  Computerworld adds that the infected computer had data not only about Epsilon, but other rockets.  JAXA is investigating the incident.

 

North Korea To Try Again for Satellite Launch, U.S. Calls Action "Highly Provocative"

North Korea To Try Again for Satellite Launch, U.S. Calls Action "Highly Provocative"

North Korea announced today that it will try again to launch a satellite into orbit between December 10 and December 22.   Its most recent attempt, in April, ended in failure as did two prior efforts. 

The United States is again condemning the launch.  In language very similar to what it issued in April, the State Department said the launch would violate United Nations Security Council Resolutions 1718 and 1874 and called it “a highly provocative act that threatens peace and security in the region.”  It goes on to argue that North Korea should instead invest in its people and abide by its international obligations.

In April, the Unha-3 rocket broke apart 90 seconds after launch and fell into the Yellow Sea 165 kilometers west of Seoul, South Korea, dooming its Kwangmyongsong-3 remote sensing satellite.   North Korea said today that this new launch will orbit a replacement satellite with the same designation and the launch would put “the country’s technology for the use of space for peaceful purposes on a new, higher stage.”

Adding to U.S. and South Korean political dismay, the launch would occur on or near the election of South Korea’s new President on December 19.   South Korea also had to cancel a second attempt to launch its own KSLV-1 rocket on Thursday because of technical problems.  South Korea tried to launch satellites in 2009 and 2010, but both attempts failed.

The choice of date for the launch may be explained, however, by North Korea’s marking of the first anniversary of the death of its former leader, Kim Jong Il, who died on December 17, 2011.  His son, Kim Jong Un, replaced him. This year is also the centennial of the birth of Kim Jong Il’s father, Kim Il Sung, the founder of North Korea.  To commemorate his birth, the country adopted a slogan that 2012 would demonstrate that North Korea is on course to be a “strong, prosperous and great nation,” according to the Huffington Post.   It quotes a North Korea expert at Dongguk University in Seoul, Koh Yu-hwan, as saying that “North Korea appears to be under pressure to redeem its April launch failure before the year of the ‘strong, prosperous and great nation’ ends.”

Whether North Korea’s scientists and engineers have had time to diagnose and correct whatever failed in April is an obvious question.  However, when two prior launch attempts failed, the North Korean media simply declared that they were successes.  Although it was well known outside of North Korea that they did not, communications are so limited inside that country that the populace may have believed they were successful.   The North Korean government could not do that in April because they had invited a contingent of western journalists to visit the launch facilities and view the launch.   Although they did not, in fact, see the launch, they were in North Korea and it would have been impossible to hide the rocket’s failure.  There is no indication that western media have been invited to this one.

 

ESA-NASA Orion Service Module Deal is for Only Two Units

ESA-NASA Orion Service Module Deal is for Only Two Units

CLARIFICATION, JANUARY 16, 2013:   At a NASA-ESA press conference today, the details of the agreement were explained.  ESA is providing certain hardware for only one service module — for the first (uncrewed) flight of Orion in 2017 — plus spare parts.   If the spare parts are not needed, they will be used for the second Orion flight (with a crew) in 2021.

ORIGINAL STORY, NOVEMBER 20, 2012.  As announced last week, the European Space Agency will provide the service module for NASA’s Orion spacecraft to offset its share of operating costs for the International Space Station (ISS) in 2017-2020.   The agreement is only for two service module units, however, not an ongoing arrangement.

NASA Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations Bill Gerstenmaier told the NASA Advisory Council (NAC) on Wednesday that ESA would build the service modules for Orion’s uncrewed test flight in 2017 and the first crewed mission in 2021.   NASA will get the intellectual property and build future service modules, he said, adding that no deal has been signed yet.  It must be approved through State Department channels, Gerstenmaier said, a process he hopes will be completed in December.

The arrangement was confirmed by Johann-Dietrich Woerner, Chairman of the Executive Board of the German Aerospace Center, at a Space Transportation Association meeting this morning.  Woerner stressed, however, that the current arrangement is limited to two because it is meant to offset ISS operating costs and does not mean future agreements might not involve additional units.  ESA might also find other uses for the module apart from the Orion program, he indicated.

ESA is using the design of its Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) to build the service module. ATV is a spacecraft that takes cargo to the ISS.  Three have been launched already and two more are planned.  Woerner was enthusiastic about the close cooperation that will be needed between European and American companies to integrate the service module with the rest of the Orion system.  EADS Astrium is ATV’s prime contractor, while Lockheed Martin is the prime contractor for Orion.

At a press conference last week, ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain spoke excitedly about the prospect of ESA being allowed “in the critical path” of the next space transportation system that will take astronauts beyond low Earth orbit.  His sentiment was echoed by Woerner this morning.  

Historically, NASA has shied away from letting other countries into the critical path where NASA would be dependent on them to build systems without which a NASA mission could not succeed.   Although NASA and ESA have decades worth of cooperation — including on the space shuttle and the International Space Station — those projects could have proceeded if ESA withdrew for any reason.  The projects would have suffered, however.    ESA’s Spacelab modules that flew in the cargo bay of the space shuttle provided a shirt-sleeve environment for a broad array of research activities.  Its Columbus module and Cupola for the ISS are significant enhancements, but, strictly speaking, the ISS could exist without them. 

This is not the first time NASA has allowed a foreign country to be in the critical path of a major mission, however.   Russia’s participation in the ISS has been critical since it joined the partnership.   Russian-built modules formed the core of the ISS in the early days of construction.  Today, NASA is completely dependent on Russia for crew access to the ISS and for lifeboat services.  It is also difficult to imagine space shuttle or ISS crews achieving all that they have without Canada’s robotic arms, Canadarm and Canadarm2.

In any case, ESA clearly is ecstatic at reaching the agreement to build at least two Orion service modules.  Whether or not there will be more is an open question.

For the moment, however, ESA is in the critical path for the 2017 and 2021 Orion missions.  At the NAC meeting, Gerstenmaier said “Do they know how much I’m counting on them?  Yes, they do.”