Category: International

Senate Debating NDAA, Including ITAR, INKSNA, Launch Liability, and SLS/Orion Funding Amendments

Senate Debating NDAA, Including ITAR, INKSNA, Launch Liability, and SLS/Orion Funding Amendments

The Senate resumed debate today on the FY2013 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), S. 3254, which authorizes funding and sets policy for the Department of Defense (DOD), military construction, and military activities of the Department of Energy.   Floor consideration began yesterday.  The House passed its version in May.

Some of the 263 (at last count) proposed amendments would affect space activities and not necessarily only national security space activities.  With few pieces of legislation expected to clear Congress for the rest of this year, the NDAA is being used as a vehicle to deal with a multitude of issues.

Senate Amendment (SA) 3078, for example, introduced by Sen. Hutchison (R-TX), has three major components:

  • extend third party launch liability indemnification from December 31, 2012 to December 31, 2014, in line with a House bill passed earlier this month;
  • extend the waiver from the Iran, North Korea, Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA) from July 1, 2016 to December 31, 2020 that NASA needs in order to enter into new agreements with Russia for International Space Station operations ; and
  • require NASA to fund the Space Launch System and Orion and related ground systems and technology developments in FY2014 and FY2015 at the same proportional levels of the Exploration account as in FY2013.

One complication in the third provision is that the FY2013 funding level is not yet known.  The government, including NASA, is operating on a Continuing Resolution (CR) until March 27, 2013 at FY2012 funding levels.

Senator Bennet (D-CO), along with Sen. Warner (D-VA) and Sen. Rubio (R-FL) introduced SA 3179, the much anticipated Senate amendment to relax export controls for commercial satellites.   The House-passed version of the NDAA adopted language restoring to the President the authority to determine whether satellites are governed by the State Department’s Munitions List and its International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), or the Department of Commerce’s dual-use Commerce Control List.  It would still prohibit satellite exports to China.  The language of the Bennet amendment is different from its House counterpart, but the goal is the same — to loosen export controls on commercial satellites to make them more competitive on the global market without endangering U.S. national security.

 

NASA, Roscosmos Choose Long Duration Crew Members

NASA, Roscosmos Choose Long Duration Crew Members

NASA and its Russian counterpart, Roscosmos, today announced the names of the two men who will comprise the first International Space Station (ISS) crew to remain in space continuously for one year.   The mission is scheduled to begin in spring 2015.

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly and Russian cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko got the nod from their agencies to serve aboard the ISS for this special mission, designed to study the long duration effects of spaceflight conditions on humans.   Both already have served regular tours aboard the ISS — Kelly on Expedition 25/26 that spanned 2010-2011, and Kornienko on Expedition 23/24 in 2010.  Kelly also flew on two space shuttle missions (STS-103 and STS-118) and has a total of over 180 days in space.   Kornienko accumulated 176 days in space on his ISS mission.  Typically, crew members remain on ISS for four-six months and then are replaced by a new crew.

NASA astronaut Scott Kelly

Photo credit: NASA

Roscosmos cosmonaut Mikhail Kornienko

Photo credit:  NASA

Scott Kelly’s twin brother, Mark, was also a NASA astronaut and scheduled to fly on a space shuttle mission to the ISS while Scott Kelly was aboard.  They would have gone down in the record books as the first twins in space.    Schedule delays pushed Mark Kelly’s shuttle flight beyond his brother’s return from the ISS, however, so that did not happen.  The delay may have been fortuitous for Mark Kelly who had more weeks to help his wife, then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, begin her ongoing recovery from an assassination attempt that occurred during that time period.  Mark Kelly resigned from NASA after his shuttle flight.

In announcing the selection of Scott Kelly and Kornienko, NASA Associate Administrator for Human Exploration and Operations Bill Gerstenmaier said the one-year mission “would expand the bounds of how we live and work in space and will increase our knowledge regarding the effects of microgravity on humans as we prepare for future missions beyond low-Earth orbit.”   Roscosmos Director Vladimir Popovkin said “We have chosen the most responsible skilled and enthusiastic crew members to expand space exploration, and we have full confidence in them.”

In the 51 years since the Soviet Union’s Yuri Gagarin inaugurated the era of human spaceflight, only four people have spent one year or more continuously in orbit, all on Russia’s Mir space station.  That is a very small pool of data on the physiological and psychological impacts of long durations in space where humans must cope with microgravity, radiation, and isolation.  Kelly and Kornienko will add two more data points. 

The four who already have experienced such long duration missions are:

  • Valeriy Polyakhov, 438 days (about 14 months), 1994-1995
  • Sergei Avdeev, 380 days, 1998-1999
  • Vladimir Titov and Musa Manarov, 366 days, 198701988

In all those cases, other cosmonauts were coming and going to Mir for shorter stays in much the same way that the ISS operates with crews rotating on regular, overlapping schedules.

Events of Interest: Week of November 26-December 1, 2012

Events of Interest: Week of November 26-December 1, 2012

The following events may be of interest in the coming week.  The House and Senate return to work this week.

Monday, November 26

Tuesday, November 27

Wednesday, November 28

Wednesday-Thursday, November 28-29

Wednesday-Friday, November 28-30

Thursday, November 29

Friday, November 30

Friday-Saturday, November 30 – December 1

 

 

 

Top Russian Government Officials Meeting November 26 to Discuss Refining Russian Space Sector

Top Russian Government Officials Meeting November 26 to Discuss Refining Russian Space Sector

Many of Russia’s key government officials will meet on Monday, November 26, to discuss “refining” the management of Russia’s space sector.

The conference is being convened by Russian Prime Minister Medvedev and participants will include Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin, Minister of Industry and Trade Denis Manturov, Minister of Finance Anton Siluanov, Minister of Labor and Social Protection Maxim Toplin, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, Russian space agency (Roscosmos) Director Vladimir Popovkin and representatives of relevant agencies and organizations according to Russia’s news agency Itar-Tass.

Rogozin announced earlier this month that the conference would take place to discuss how to restructure Roscosmos although today’s Itar-Tass story more broadly references “the system of management of space rocket industry organization.”

In addition to Russia’s unusual spate of launch failures since December 2010, the space industry also has been rocked by a corruption scandal involving the company that builds and maintains Russia’s GLONASS navigation satellite system, which is similar to the U.S. GPS system.  Yuri Urlichich,  director-general of Russian Space Systems left his job in recent days — some reports say he was fired, others say he resigned due to illnesss — after investigators determined that the company embezzled 6.5 billion rubles (about $200 million) of federal funding for GLONASS.

Russian President Vladimir Putin also recently fired his defense minister, Anatoly Serdyukov, as his government tries to crack down on corruption.

Will Sarah Brightman be the Next Space Tourist or Not?

Will Sarah Brightman be the Next Space Tourist or Not?

It was HUGE news at the time.   World famous English recording artist Sarah Brightman would be the next space tourist, flying into space on a Russian Soyuz spacecraft.  Today, Russia’s space agency, Roscosmos, seems to be singing a different tune

The original announcement was made at a news conference in Moscow on October 12, where Brightman did say that the details were still being worked out, but speculation was rampant that it would take place in 2015 and was somehow tied to the NASA-Roscosmos decision to have a crew spend one year on the ISS (which would open up Soyuz seats for purposes other than crew rotation).  Brightman said at the time she was not a dreamer, but a dream chaser, which just happens to be the title of a new album she plans to release next year.

Photo credit:  sarahbrightman.com

Today, six weeks later, Roscosmos Director Vladimir Popovkin, said that his agency has not yet decided if Brightman will fly.  Russia’s RIA Novosti quotes him as saying “I have met her.  She is all set to fly, but Roscosmos has not yet decided on it.  We have a range of possibilities, including sending young cosmonauts to fly.  A final decision will be made in the first half of 2013.”  Other Russian media outlets reported the same story.

Difficult to know what to make of the statement.  The head of human spaceflight at Roscosmos, Alexei Krasnov, was one of the speakers at the October 12 news conference where everyone was clearly enthusiastic.   Russia Today (RT) commented today that Brightman has not yet signed a contract with Roscosmos and some in the Russian space program think the announcement was simply part of the publicity campaign for her new album.  It also noted that she would be 55 if she flew in 2015, which would put her among the oldest people to fly into space.  Itar-Tass reported, however, that she underwent a medical examination at Star City, home to Russia’s cosmonauts, in July 2012, and received approval to fly.

ESA Ministers Approve Participation in NASA's Orion, Other Elements of Future ESA Program

ESA Ministers Approve Participation in NASA's Orion, Other Elements of Future ESA Program

The European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Ministerial Council approved ESA participation in NASA’s program to build the Orion spacecraft system to take astronauts beyond low Earth orbit. ESA will provide the service module for the Orion system as an in-kind contribution to offset its share of operating costs for the International Space Station (ISS) in 2017-2020.

ESA and NASA have a long history of cooperation in human spaceflight, from the Spacelab module that flew in the cargo bay of the space shuttle providing a shirt-sleeve environment for research to the Columbus module and the cupola on the ISS. They also have engaged in decades of cooperation on earth and space science programs. NASA’s decision earlier this year to withdraw from the ExoMars program, which envisioned close cooperation between the two on robotic Mars exploration, cast a chill on the relationship, but apparently not for long.  Russia has now replaced the United States as ESA’s ExoMars partner, another agreement formally reached this week.

ESA will build the service module for Orion based on technology and experience from its Automated Transfer Vehicle (ATV) program. ATV takes cargo to the ISS. ESA will provide the service module to NASA in exchange for ESA’s share of ISS operating costs for 2017-2020 and called the decision “strategically important for Europe,” noting it would put ESA in the “critical path of future human space exploration endeavours, together with NASA.”

That decision was one of many made in the past two days by the relevant ministers for each of ESA’s 20 member states. Collectively they agreed to provide 10 billion euros “for the years ahead.” ESA’s science programs are part of its mandatory activities to which each member state must contribute. They will be flat funded for 2013-2017, which should permit implementation of ESA’s Cosmic Vision 2015-2025 program. Among the science programs that will proceed are Gaia, LISA Pathfinder, BepiColombo, Solar Orbiter, Euclid and JUICE. A proposal for a lunar lander will not.

A contentious issue within the optional program — where each country decides whether or not to participate — is whether to build an improved version of the Ariane 5 launch vehicle, an Ariane 5 ME (for Mid-life Evolution), or design a new Ariane 6 that might better fit future market needs. The ministers punted on that issue, approving two years of funding for both and scheduling another ministerial meeting two years from now to further debate the topic. During a press conference today, a reporter pointed out to ESA Director General Jean-Jacques Dordain that Elon Musk, founder and CEO/CTO of SpaceX, had said in a recent interview that ESA could not compete with SpaceX’s Falcon rocket if it chose Ariane 5 ME over Ariane 6. Dordain jokingly asked whether that meant Musk wanted to contribute to Ariane 6, but on a serious note said that the design of Ariane 6 would respond to customer requirements — reliability, lower cost, and payload mass to orbit.

ESA is a European space agency whose ties to the European Union are increasingly close. Eighteen of ESA’s 20 members also are members of the EU and two-thirds of the EU members belong to ESA, Dordain said. ESA and the EU are working together on developing a navigation satellite system, Galileo, and the Global Monitoring for Environment and Security (GMES) system using Sentinel satellites. The ESA ministers approved an extension to ESA’s navigation satellite effort for 2013-2015, which includes Galileo and another system, EGNOS, as well as to the GMES Space Component program for 2013-2014.  Member states started subscribing for the next time period for GMES, 2015-2020, too.  Other space applications programs in earth observation and meteorology were continued.

Specifics on funding for any of these programs were not released today, only the top line figure of 10 billion Euros. Dordain said during the press conference this level of commitment was a “big success” considering the economic conditions in Europe and is a recognition of the role that space activities play in competitiveness and economic growth.

 

Poland Officially Becomes ESA's 20th Member

Poland Officially Becomes ESA's 20th Member

Poland officially joined the European Space Agency (ESA) today, November 19, 2012.  

Poland and ESA exchanged Accession Agreements on September 13.  The Government of Poland needed to ratify the agreement and completed the final step of depositing the “ratification instrument” with the Government of France today.  ESA is headquartered in Paris, France.  

ESA reports that the Polish flag is now flying alongside those of the other 19 ESA members as its Ministerial Council gets ready to begin a meeting that will decide major aspects of Europe’s space program for the next several years.  The two-day ministerial meeting starts tomorrow in Naples, Italy.

The other 19 members of ESA are:  Austria, Belgium, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Events of Interest: Weeks of November 18-December 1, 2012

Events of Interest: Weeks of November 18-December 1, 2012

The following events may of interest in the coming two weeks.  This is a combined edition because it’s Thanksgiving week and things are rather quiet in the near-term. Congress is in recess for the holiday.  Activity resumes its usual pace next week, though.

During the Week

Two important events will happen this week, however.   First, three International Space Station (ISS) crew members return to Earth tonight (Sunday) at 8:53 pm Eastern Standard Time aboard their Soyuz TMA-05M spacecraft.  NASA TV will cover the undocking and landing live.   The three returning crew members are NASA’s Suni Williams, Japan’s Aki Hoshide, and Russia’s Yuri Malenchenko.

Second, on Tuesday and Wednesday, the European Space Agency’s (ESA’s) Ministerial Council will meet in Italy to decide the near-term future of Europe’s space program.   MInisterial Council meetings take place every 3-4 years, bringing together the relevant government ministers from each of ESA’s member countries.   Twenty countries now belong to ESA — Poland just joined.  Even with so many countries participating, finding money is a challenge and this meeting will determine the fate of a number of ESA’s programs.

Sunday, November 18 (Eastern Standard Time)/Monday, November 19 (local time in Kazakhstan)

Tuesday-Wednesday, November 20-21

Monday, November 26

Tuesday, November 27

Wednesday, November 28

Wednesday-Thursday, November 28-29

Wednesday-Friday, November 28-30

Friday, November 30

Friday-Saturday, November 30 – December 1

 

 

 

Three ISS Crew Members Return to Earth Tonight (EST) — Update

Three ISS Crew Members Return to Earth Tonight (EST) — Update

Update, November 18, 9:10 pm EST:  The crew landed three minutes later than scheduled because the spacecraft overshot the landing site due to a mistimed parachute deployment.  Official landing time according to NASA TV was 7:56 am Monday local time (8:56 pm Sunday EST), about an hour before sunrise.  The recovery team was able to reposition itself quickly so it could extract the crew promptly in the “frigid” weather at the landing site.

Editor’s Note: November 19:  Bob Christy at zarya.info says that NASA TV was incorrect and the landing time was only 50 seconds later than planned and the landing site just 2 kilometers away from the planned point.

Soyuz TMA-05M with three International Space Station (ISS) crew members is returning to Earth tonight, Eastern Standard Time (EST).  NASA’s Suni Williams, Japan’s Aki Hoshide, and Russia’s Yuri Malenchenko are coming home.

All times in this article are expressed in EST.   Times stated by NASA for this event are in Central Standard Time (CST), an hour behind EST.  The local time in Kazakhstan, where the spacecraft lands, is 12 hours ahead of CST. 

Undocking took place on time at 5:26 pm EST (4:26 pm CST/4:26 am Monday in Kazakhstan).  Event times for the rest of the journey are:

  • Soyuz deorbit burn begins — 7:58 EST
  • Soyuz deoribt burn complete — 8:03 pm EST
  • Soyuz module separation — 8:26 pm EST
  • Atmospheric entry — 8:29 pm EST
  • Parachute open command — 8:38 pm EST
  • Landing — 8:53 pm EST

The local time in Kazakhstan at landing, 7:53 am, is about one hour before sunrise.

Weather at the landing site is “bitter” according to the announcer on NASA TV, with a temperature of about 14 degrees Fahrenheit and wind chill of about zero degrees F.  It has been snowing there, but stopped for now.  NASA released this photo of the landing site earlier.

 Source:  NASA Johnson Space Center

Ron Barber Wins Giffords's Congressional Seat

Ron Barber Wins Giffords's Congressional Seat

The Associated Press (AP) has finally called the congressional race in Arizona’s second district, declaring Ron Barber the winner in his contest against Martha McSally.

Barber (D-AZ) will continue to represent the Tucson area.  He was elected to that seat in a special election earlier this year to replace his former boss and friend, Gabrielle Giffords.   Giffords resigned her seat in Congress in January 2012, a year after being shot in the head in an assassination attempt.  Barber, then her district director, was at her side and also wounded in the attack that killed six people attending a “Congress on Your Corner” event at a local grocery store in Tucson.

Giffords is married to former astronaut Mark Kelly and chaired the space and aeronautics subcommittee of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee in the 111th Congress (2009-2010).

Vote counting has taken a particularly long time in the second district and it was a very close race.  The AP concluded that even with some votes not yet counted even now, that McSally could not overcome Barber’s slim lead.   McSally conceded the race this morning.