Category: Military

SASC Unhappy With Slow Air Force Progress on RD-180 Replacement

SASC Unhappy With Slow Air Force Progress on RD-180 Replacement

Key members of the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC) left no doubt at a recent hearing about their dissatisfaction with the Air Force’s slow progress in building a replacement for Russia’s RD-180 rocket engine.

Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James, Air Force Space Command Commander Gen. John Hyten, and Government Accountability Office (GAO) expert Cristina Chaplain testified to SASC’s Strategic Forces subcommittee on April 29 about a wide range of military space issues, but space launch dominated the discussion.

Subcommittee chairman Jeff Sessions (R-Alabama) and full committee chairman John McCain (R-Arizona) demanded to know why the Air Force is moving so slowly after Congress authorized and appropriated $220 million for FY2015 to build an American replacement for Russia’s RD-180 engine by 2019.  The RD-180 is used for the United Launch Alliance’s (ULA’s) Atlas V rocket.  Both Senators said the Air Force has spent only $14,000 of that money so far.

James responded that the Air Force has obligated $50 million, of which $37 million is FY2014 money and $13 million is from the FY2015 amounts, and she plans to obligate another $45-50 million in the next six months.   (No explanation was given for the difference in the committee’s figures and those provided by James, though funds are “obligated” once a contract is signed, but not “spent” until the money is transferred to the contractor, so that may be one factor.)

Hyten explained that the launch industry has changed significantly in the past few years thanks to NASA’s decision to use public private partnerships (PPPs) like the one it has with SpaceX to develop new launch capabilities.  He argued that the Air Force needs time to learn how to interact effectively with industry in this new environment.

In 2006, ULA was formed as a joint venture between the two major launch services providers  – Boeing and Lockheed Martin – to ensure a strong industrial base at a time of reduced launch demand.   ULA has been a monopoly launch services provider for most national security launches since then using the Atlas V and Delta IV.  SpaceX wants to break into that market and Congress has embraced the idea of competition as a way to lower launch costs.

DOD and the Air Force apparently have now embraced competition as well.  James went so far as to say that U.S. national security “will be far better off the day that we certify SpaceX” and reiterated that will be done by June.  Last year, DOD promised it would be done by December 2014, but that did not happen. James and others have since made new assurances that it will be accomplished by June.

James and Hyten plan to adopt NASA’s PPP model and have a four-step path that will “result in a commercially competitive domestic launch capability to replace the RD-180.”

  • Step 1:   Technology risk reduction, for which the money being obligated now will be used.
  • Step 2: Invest in rocket propulsion systems with multiple providers “to partner in their ongoing investment in domestic propulsion systems.”   
  • Step 3:  Using the PPP approach, enter into agreements with launch system providers to provide domestically-powered launch capability. 
  • Step 4:   Compete and award contracts “with certified launch providers for launch services during the period 2018-2022.”

The years 2018-2022 would be a period of transition from the RD-180-powered Atlas V to the new systems.

Hyten and James also continued to press their case that they do not want to replace one monopoly with another, with SpaceX replacing ULA in that role.  The argument goes that because ULA recently decided to end production of the smaller version of Delta IV, it now has only Atlas V and the very expensive, larger Delta IV Heavy to offer.   Although the Atlas V can compete with SpaceX, if it cannot be used after 2019, SpaceX would win every competition because the Delta IV costs $400 million per launch.  Hyten and James said they may be able to have a new American engine by 2019, but it will be 2022 before that engine is integrated into a new rocket and certified.  For those intervening years, SpaceX would be a monopoly for national security launches. Thus they want Congress to allow use of the RD-180 until 2022.

Last week, the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) approved a FY2016 NDAA that provides more flexibility in the 2019 date.  At the SASC hearing, Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) actually recommended that the Air Force cut itself “some slack” on the date because he did not think it could be ready by 2019 and it would be worse for DOD to come back at that time and say it needed more RD-180s.

Hyten and James also want Congress to clarify that ULA can obtain from Russia all 18 of the RD-180 engines envisioned under the December 2013 block-buy contract with ULA. The Air Force is interpreting the law to mean that only the 5 engines that were paid for – rather than contracted for – prior to February 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea, are permissible.   Sessions indicated that obtaining all 18 engines was congressional intent in the FY2015 NDAA.

Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Indiana), the subcommittee’s top Democrat, wanted to know what assurance DOD has that Russia will deliver the RD-180s already under contract.   James replied that Russia has a track record for delivering what it promised, but if not, there is a backup plan.  ULA has a two year inventory of RD-180s.  If no more were delivered, about one-third of the national security satellites could be launched by SpaceX’s Falcon 9, but the other two-thirds would have to be shifted to ULA’s Delta IV, which is “30-50 percent more expensive” than Atlas V “and that’s not in our budget submission right now,” Hyten said.

SASC and its subcommittees will markup their version of the FY2016 NDAA during the week of May 11.  The markups are all closed.

House To Take Up Defense, Weather, Commercial Space Bills This Month

House To Take Up Defense, Weather, Commercial Space Bills This Month

In a letter to House Republicans yesterday, Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) laid out a packed agenda of national security and “innovation” bills that the House will debate and vote on this month.  The House is in recess this coming week, but will return May 12 for two weeks of work before recessing again for Memorial Day.

McCarthy’s list of bills does not include the NASA Authorization Act for 2016 and 2017 that cleared the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee on a party line vote on April 30.

Among the “innovation” bills that will be considered during the week of May 18-21 are the Weather Forecasting Improvement Act that was approved by the House SS&T Committee on March 26.  It is not focused on weather satellites per se, but includes a pilot program to encourage the private sector to build and launch commercial systems to provide weather data that NOAA would purchase.   Also on McCarthy’s list is a “Commercial Space Bill” that has not yet been introduced.  It is described as facilitating a “pro-growth environment for the developing commercial space industry.”  A draft update of the Commercial Space Launch Act (CSLA) has been circulating on the Hill for several weeks, but this bill apparently will be broader, dealing with other aspects of commercial space activities.   The other innovation bills are not directly related to space activities.

But first the House will debate the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) that was approved by the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) on April 30.  H.R. 1735 includes funding and policy direction for most national security space programs.  For example, iIt would modify the language in last year’s NDAA regarding the timeline for replacing Russia’s RD-180 rocket engine with an American-built engine.  Existing law requires that to happen by 2019.  The bill would add more flexibility.  SpacePolicyOnline.com summarized the space-related provisions on April 23 that were adopted by the Strategic Forces subcommittee, and, on April 30, space-related amendments added during full committee markup.

The NDAA will be debated during the week of May 12-15 along with two other national security bills that are not directly space related.

Those bills will all be debated by the House as a whole this month.  Other legislation may be working its way through committees.  The Commercial Space Act listed by McCarthy is one.  Under regular procedure, it would be introduced, hearings held, followed by subcommittee markup and then full committee markup, but any of those steps (except introduction) can be skipped, especially if the majority is confident it has the votes to pass it.  McCarthy represents the district in California that includes Edwards Air Force Base and the Mojave Air and Space Port.  He introduced the Suborbital and Orbital Advancement and Regulatory Streamlining (SOARS) Act in the last Congress.  House SS&T held a hearing in November 2013, but no further action was taken.  It would not be surprising if the substance of that bill is incorporated in the new legislation.

The House Appropriations Commerce-Justice-Science (CJS) subcommittee may also markup its FY2016 bill in May although the committee has not announced its schedule for the month yet.  The committee has approved three of the 12 regular appropriations bills already and two (Military Construction-Veterans Affairs, and Energy and Water ) have passed the House.

What's Happening in Space Policy May 4-8, 2015

What's Happening in Space Policy May 4-8, 2015

Here is our list of space policy events for the week of May 4-8, 2015 and any insight we can offer about them.  The Senate is in session this week.  The House is in recess.

During the Week

With the House in recess and Spring in the air, this is a comparatively light week for space policy aficionados.  There are two interesting conferences in Washington, DC — WIA’s Aerospace 2015 on Tuesday and the Humans 2 Mars Summit on Tuesday and Wednesday — but for many the highlight probably will be the SpaceX pad abort test on Wednesday at Cape Canaveral, FL.  It is a test, and a very brief one as NASA and SpaceX keep pointing out, of the abort system for the Dragon spacecraft as part of its certification for carrying NASA astronauts.  

At a briefing on May 1, SpaceX’s Hans Koenigsman joked that if you wait to hear the sound, the test will be over already.  The test does not involve the use of a Falcon 9 rocket.  Instead, eight Super Draco engines integrated into the Dragon capsule will fire for just six seconds, propelling the capsule to an altitude of about 5,000 feet.  Dragon will then descend under parachutes to a water landing 1.5 minutes after ignition.  The landing point is about 1 mile offshore.  Dragon will be recovered and returned to SpaceX’s McGregor, TX facility for analysis.  An instrumented dummy named Buster will be along for the ride to measure g forces and other parameters that an astronaut would experience.   The brief test has a long launch window, 7:00 am – 2:30 pm ET, and Koenigsman urged everyone to be patient — they will do it when they’re ready.

Those and other events we know about as of Saturday are listed below.

Tuesday, May 5

Tuesday-Wednesday, May 5-6

  • Humans 2 Mars Summit (Explore Mars and George Washington University’s Space Policy Institute), George Washington University , Washington, DC (location update:  the conference is being held in different locations on the GWU conference depending on the day; check the event’s website for more information)

Wednesday, May 6

HASC Approves FY2016 NDAA

HASC Approves FY2016 NDAA

After 18 hours of debate, the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) adopted the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) as amended during its deliberations.  For space programs, little changed from the subcommittee markup last week.

The markup of H.R. 1735 began on time at 10:00 am ET on Wednesday and ended at 4:39 am ET today (per Politico).  The only lengthy break was to hear Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s address to a joint session of Congress Wednesday morning.

Among the dozens of amendments debated, only a few affected space programs.  Three “sense of Congress” amendments were adopted as part of an en bloc package (Rogers 2) submitted by Strategic Forces chairman Mike Rogers (R-AL).  Sense of Congress statements basically assert how Congress feels about an issue, but do not require action. Two were offered by Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO) and one by Rep. Rob Bishop (R-UT) saying it is the sense of Congress that —

  • as outlined in the 2010 National Space Policy, the United States should help assure the use of space for all responsible parties and deter others from interference and attack, defend U.S. and allied systems, and, if deterrence fails, defeat efforts to attack them (Lamborn);
  • a robust multi-mission space sensor network will be vital to ensuring a strong missile defense system (Lamborn); and
  • the Secretary of Defense should evaluate options for using current DOD assets for the purpose of rapid reconstitution of critical space-based warfighter enabling capabilities (Bishop).

Separately, Rep. Trent Franks  (R-AZ) offered an amendment (207r1) directing the Missile Defense Agency to “commence the concept definition, design, research, development, and engineering evaluation of a space-based ballistic missile intercept and defeat layer to the ballistic missile defense system.”  The amendment has a list of specifications and requires a report to Congress one year after enactment of the law with an interim briefing by March 31, 2016.  The amendment was adopted 35-27.

At the very end of the markup, another en bloc amendment (Full Committee En Bloc #5) was adopted that included one sponsored by Rep. Steve Knight (R-CA).  The amendment (159r2) modifies section 1606 on acquisition strategy for the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program by adding more requirements to ensure full and open competition.

A webcast of the markup and all the amendments and their disposition are on the committee’s website, which has a special section specifically for the NDAA.

Apart from those minor changes, the bill that cleared the committee this morning is the same as what emerged from subcommittee markup last week regarding space programs.

What's Happening in Space Policy April 26-May 2, 2015

What's Happening in Space Policy April 26-May 2, 2015

This week’s space policy related events begin today (Sunday) with many more coming up for the week of April 26-May 2, 2015. The House and Senate are in session.

During the Week

It’s another busy week in the space policy business that begins today and runs all the way through Saturday.

Tonight (Sunday), the CBS 60 Minutes program will air a segment on Air Force Space Command and threats posed to U.S. satellites.  In a preview on the CBS website, Gen. Hyten, commander of Air Force Space Command, is asked if we will defend our satellites by force if necessary and he replies “That’s why we have a military.  I’m not NASA.”

Hyten will have a different kind of appearance later in the week (Wednesday) when he and Secretary of the Air Force Deborah Lee James testify to the Senate Armed Services Committee’s Strategic Forces subcommittee about the FY2016 budget request for military space programs.  They will be joined by GAO’s Cristina Chaplain.  That same day the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) will be marking up its version of the FY2016
National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), including recommendations on the military space program that were adopted by the HASC Strategic Forces
subcommittee last week
Full committee markup is typically a lengthy affair with many
amendments debated.  Check back here for a recap of any related to the
space program.  

Speaking of NASA, Dava Newman’s nomination to be NASA Deputy Administrator is scheduled for debate and (hopefully) passage by the Senate on Monday beginning at 5:00 pm ET.  The agreement between the parties is for 30 minutes of debate divided equally, so if all time is used, the vote would be at 5:30 pm ET.  Later in the week (Thursday) and across the Hill, the House Science, Space, and Technology (SS&T) committee will markup a new NASA authorization bill.  This one (no bill number yet) covers 2016 and 2017.  The House already passed a bill for 2015, so together they would provide a three-year authorization for the agency.  The Senate has not acted on a new NASA authorization bill, but indications are that they plan to do so, although the timing is not clear.  NASA’s most recent authorization act covered only through FY2013.

Meanwhile, the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation will learn how its FY2016 budget request fares in the House Appropriations subcommittee that provides its funding.  The Transportation-HUD (T-HUD) subcommittee markup is on Wednesday morning.

Many more events are on tap, including one that is just plain fun.  If you’re in the Washington, DC area on Saturday, you and your family can enjoy Space Day at the National Air and Space Museum downtown.  This year it commemorates 50 years of spacewalks.  Astronauts will be on hand to give talks and there are kid-friendly activities planned.

All the events we know about as of Sunday morning are listed below.

Sunday, April 26

Monday, April 27

Monday-Friday, April 27 – May 1

Tuesday-Thursday, April 28-30

Wednesday, April 29

Thursday, April 30

Thursday-Saturday, April 30 – May 2

Friday, May 1

Saturday, May 2

HASC Subcommittee Proposes Changes to RD-180 Restrictions Among Multiple Other Space Issues – UPDATE

HASC Subcommittee Proposes Changes to RD-180 Restrictions Among Multiple Other Space Issues – UPDATE

UPDATE:  The subcommittee approved the draft on April 23 with a few amendments.  The only one related to space was offered by Rep. Lamborn (R-CO) as part of an en-bloc package.  It would specifically prohibit DOD from relying on China or Russia for space-based weather data.

The Strategic Forces Subcommittee of the House Armed Services Committee (HASC) will mark up its portion of the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) tomorrow.  A draft of the subcommittee’s bill and report, which covers most DOD space programs including national security space launch, was released today. Among its provisions, the draft favorably disposes of Air Force and United Launch Alliance (ULA) concerns about provisions in last year’s NDAA restricting use of Russia’s RD-180 rocket engines.

Last year’s law told DOD that it could not use RD-180s for national security space launches after 2019, although waivers were permitted under certain circumstances.  Those waivers were not sufficient for the Air Force and ULA, however, and they have been lobbying for more flexibility because they do not think a U.S. alternative to the RD-180 will be ready by 2019.   The RD-180 powers ULA’s Atlas V rocket, one of the two Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles (EELVs) that launch most national security satellites.  ULA’s Delta IV is the other.  SpaceX is diligently trying to be certified to compete against ULA for those launches.

At a subcommittee hearing last month, ULA and the Air Force laid out their concerns and the subcommittee clearly heard them.  In the draft text, expected to be approved at subcommittee level tomorrow and by the full committee next week, even more flexibility would be provided by allowing the Secretary of Defense (SecDef) simply to invoke “national security interests” as a reason for waiving the current law’s provisions and certifying those interests to the relevant congressional committees. 

The draft also clarifies that the prohibition on buying RD-180s applies to engines ordered pursuant to the December 18, 2013 contract between ULA and the Air Force regardless of whether payment was made prior to February 1, 2014.  Last year’s law exempted engines ordered under that contract, but DOD lawyers were interpreting the law to mean that payment had to have been made by February 1, 2014, as opposed to the engines being options under that contract.

The draft also would change section 1604 of last year’s law that authorizes $220 million to build a U.S. alternative to the RD-180 engine, but specifically not to develop a new launch vehicle.  The draft language clarifies that it is permissible to use the funds for “the necessary interfaces” to a launch vehicle.   It also adds language requiring the SecDef to use a “streamlined acquisition approach, including tailored documentation and review processes.”

In addition, the draft addresses the “EELV Launch Capabilities” (ELC) contract that the Air Force has with ULA that covers infrastructure and engineering services.  The Air Force pays ULA for launches under two contracts:  the cost-plus-incentive-fee ELC contract and a fixed-price EELV Launch Services (ELS) contract that covers hardware.   Critics call the approximately $1 billion per year ELC a subsidy, but ULA and the Air Force defend it as a mechanism adopted when ULA was created in 2006 to assure that the Air Force could launch its satellites whenever needed.  Air Force and ULA officials concede, however, that times have changed and ELC will not be repeated in future contracts.  The draft report language would, indeed, make that reality, although the language is quite generous saying that the ELC contract must be discontinued by the latter of the dates when obligations under the current contract are met (the contract is through 2017) or December 31, 2020, and the SecDef can waive the provision entirely for national security reasons. 

The draft contains other language that could be construed as supporting either ULA or SpaceX.  For example, it calls for a 10-year acquisition strategy for the EELV program that requires competition, but also ensures that any contract takes into account “the effect of all Federal contracts entered into and any assistance provided” to the competitors.   SpaceX argues that the ELC contract is a subsidy to ULA, but others points out that SpaceX has benefited from its Space Act Agreements and contracts with NASA for development of the Falcon 9 rocket under the commercial cargo and commercial crew programs and those should be taken into account, too.

The draft addresses a range of other national security space issues as well, including the following:

  • Limits the availability of funds for a new Weather Satellite System until the SecDef briefs certain congressional committees on a plan to address DOD cloud characterization and theater weather imagery needs, and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff certifies to Congress that the plan will not negatively affect commanders of combatant commands and meet those requirements.   This provision addresses concerns that DOD may become dependent on Chinese or Russian geostationary weather satellites for weather data over the Middle East currently provided by a European satellite that is scheduled for decommissioning next year and will not be replaced. At a March 25 hearing, HASC Strategic Forces subcommittee chairman Mike Rogers (R-AL) said he is concerned DOD is “headed down a path with significant risk.  We will not allow critical capabilities our warfighters rely on to be based out of Moscow or Beijing” and Rep. Doug Lamborn (R-CO) queried DOD Deputy Assistant Secretary for Space Policy Doug Loverro on the issue.  Loverro replied that DOD does not know how it will address the gap in European coverage right now, but is working with the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) on the issue.  NOAA manages the U.S. civil weather satellite program and has cooperative agreements with Europe.
  • Requires an evaluation of the ability of the Space Based Infrared System (SBIRS) to detect, track and target, or develop a capability to do so, against the full range of threats to the United States and its allies.
  • Modifies language in last year’s law concerning DOD’s pilot project for acquisition of commercial satellite communication services.
  • Requires the SecDef to designate a senior DOD official to procure wideband satellite communications unless the procurement is required to meet an urgent national need, and to provide a plan to meet DOD’s requirements for satellite communications, including identification of roles and responsibilities.
  • Amends chapter 9 of Title 10 of the U.S. Code to establish a unified major force program for national security space programs and requires an assessment of the budget needed for those programs for 2017-2020 and a report on how to carry them out.
  • Requires the SecDef and the Director of National Intelligence (DNI) to develop and implement a space science and technology strategy.
  • Requires briefings on the utility and impacts of combatant commanders directly tasking commercial imagery satellites.
  • Requires a briefing on commercial space-based environmental monitoring capabilities and their utility in meeting DOD requirements.
  • Requires an evaluation of national security space and missile test ranges and infrastructure.
  • Recommends that DOD accelerate the development and fielding of M-code capable GPS user terminals.
  • Requires a briefing on the potential value and advisability of establishing a temporary advisory team for the GPS Next Generation Operational Control Segment (OCX).
  • Requires a briefing on the potential to accelerate the current increment of the Joint Space Operations Center Mission System (JMS) program.
  • Requires a briefing from the SecDef on DOD’s requirements for a backup positioning, navigation and timing system to GPS.
  • Requires a briefing on acquisition practices for national security space programs.
  • Requires the SecDef, the DNI and the Director of the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to submit a plan to strengthen national security space stewardship, leadership, management and organization while streamlining decision-making and limiting unnecessary bureaucracy.

Subcommittee markup is at noon tomorrow, April 23.  Full committee markup is on April 29.

 

 

 

What's Happening in Space Policy April 20-25, 2015

What's Happening in Space Policy April 20-25, 2015

Here is our list of space policy related events for the week of April 20-25, 2015 and any insight we can offer about them.  The House and Senate are in session this week.

During the Week

NASA and the astrophysics community celebrate the 25th anniversary of the iconic Hubble Space Telescope this week. There are a number of events at the Space Telescope Science Institute near Baltimore, which operates Hubble, and in Washington, DC to highlight the breathtaking images and science from Hubble that have captivated the scientific community and the public for two-and-a-half decades — with more to come.  Some of the events are by invitation only, but NASA TV will broadcast three (see below) on Thursday, Friday and Saturday.  The Saturday event at the National Air and Space Museum’s Udvar-Hazy Center near Dulles Airport is an open family day.

Meanwhile, on Capitol Hill, the House Armed Services Committee’s subcommittees will mark up their respective portions of the FY2016 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) this week.  The Strategic Forces subcommittee, which handles most DOD space programs, holds its markup at noon on Thursday.  Many subcommittee markups have been rather pro forma in recent years, with agreements worked out ahead of time or deferred for debate at the full committee markup (scheduled for next week).   The text of the bill, H.R. 1735, is posted on congress.gov, but it says very little about space programs.   Most of those details are included in the report to accompany the bill.  The draft report is not public yet.

Those and other events we know about as of Sunday morning are listed below.

Monday-Friday, April 20-24

Tuesday-Wednesday, April 21-22

Wednesday, April 22

Wednesday-Thursday, April 22-23

  • NRC Space Studies Board (SSB), National Academy of Sciences building, 2101 Constitutive Ave,m Washington, DC ( Wednesday is joint with ASEB),  Some sessions are closed.

Thursday, April 23

Friday, April 24

  • Hubble 25th Anniversary Event, National Air and Space Museum (NASM), 600 Independence Ave. NW, Washington, DC, 8:00-9:00 pm ET (by invitation only, but watch on NASA TV)

Saturday, April 25

ULA Introduces Its New Vulcan Rocket That "Changes Everything"

ULA Introduces Its New Vulcan Rocket That "Changes Everything"

In a breathless exposition of the attributes of his company’s new rocket, United Launch Alliance (ULA) President Tory Bruno promised it “changes everything” about space launch and the future use of space.

Bruno announced the rocket’s name, Vulcan, and details about it and the company’s new business strategy at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, CO today.  The name was chosen by over one million participants in a ULA naming contest.  Zeus and GalaxyOne were runners-up.

Bruno laid out a four step plan.  First, ULA will introduce the new Vulcan rocket in 2019.  It basically will be an Atlas V rocket with a Centaur upper stage, but instead of a single Russian RD-180 engine, it will use two Blue Origin BE-4’s.  It will have 20 percent more lift capability than the Atlas V and be less expensive.

Second, ULA will introduce a new upper stage to replace Centaur in 2023.  The Advanced Cryogenic Evolved Stage (ACES) is what will change everything about utilization of space, Bruno said.

Third, ULA will introduce reusability by recovering the Vulcan’s first stage engines.  Instead of trying to recover the entire first stage – as SpaceX is doing with Falcon – ULA will separate the engines from the booster after they have completed their task of sending a payload into space.  Using a hypersonic decelerator, the engines will return Earthward where they will be scooped out of mid-air by helicopters, thereby avoiding immersion in sea water.

The fourth step introduces an era of “distributed lift” in 2024 where various elements of a space facility will be sent into orbit by Vulcan rockets separately and assembled in orbit using the ACES upper stage, which can be restarted many times and move objects from one location to another.  Bruno envisions fuel depots, water depots, and commercial human habitats and the overall commercial utilization of space benefiting from this capability.

ULA’s dramatic plans are stimulated by equally dramatic changes in the U.S. launch services market over the past year.

ULA was created in 2006 by the Air Force, Boeing and Lockheed Martin when the market for launch services was insufficient to support both companies’ rockets –  Delta IV and Atlas V, respectively – but the Air Force wanted to be able to use both of them to ensure its national security satellites could be launched whenever needed.

The ULA launches are very expensive, however, and the Atlas V uses Russian RD-180 engines.   Competition from SpaceX and the deterioration in the U.S.-Russian relationship because of Russia’s actions in Ukraine have changed the landscape.  Congress has made clear that it does not want U.S. national security satellite launches to be dependent on a foreign supplier, and they want the Air Force to embrace competition from “new entrants” like Space X.

The FY2015 National Defense Authorization Act requires the Secretary of Defense to stop using RD-180s for national security launches by 2019, although waivers are possible under certain circumstances.   Bruno reiterated today that the initial version of Vulcan will be ready by 2019, but added that it would be used for commercial launches in the beginning.  He does not anticipate launching for the Air Force until 2022-2023, after the rocket is certified.  The Air Force is asking Congress to amend the law to give it more time to transition from Atlas V with its RD-180s to the new ULA rocket.

Meanwhile, SpaceX expects to be certified to compete with ULA for national security launches this summer.

These events have spurred ULA to rethink its future and Bruno was brought in as President last August.  Today was the unveiling of ULA’s new strategy and new rocket.

ULA’s primary plan is to use two liquid oxygen (LOX)/methane BE-4 engines built by Blue Origin to replace the single RD-180 used in an Atlas V today.   The company has a backup plan with Aerojet Rocketdyne for a traditional LOX-kerosene engine (AR1) in case the BE-4 development encounters problems.  ULA will decide between the two in 12-18 months, Bruno said.

Perhaps the most visionary aspects of ULA’s plans are reusing the Vulcan first stage engines and its plans for the ACES upper stage.

After separating from the first stage, the engines would use an “advanced hypersonic decelerator heat shield” to return towards Earth where they would be snatched out of mid-air by a helicopter and returned to the ULA factory where they would ”plop” into the next booster in line for launch.  Bruno said it would result in a 90 percent reduction in booster propulsion cost.

But it is the ACES upper stage that is the “game changer.”  A ULA graphic used at today’s briefing exclaims “Orbital Capabilities Unleashing Mankind’s Potential in Space.” Bruno listed asteroid mining, building infrastructure for “real and permanent human presence,” including fuel depots, water depots, and commercial human habitats, as examples of what ACES will enable by reusing the cryogenic upper stage’s leftover liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen so it can remain in orbit for weeks, avoiding the “boil off” that limits the lifetime of cryogenic upper stages now.  The ACES Integrated Vehicle Fluids System will utilize the liquid hydrogen and oxygen to repressurize the fuel tanks, generate electrical power, and provide control thrust and attitude thrust.  ULA is working with the Rousch race car company on the advanced internal combustion engine that makes it all possible, so it is “the formula race car of space,” Bruno quipped.

With that capability, “We can do anything you can imagine,” he promised.

Bruno also offered “one teaser” – ULA plans something called “FastBuy ReadyLaunch” that will “revolutionize” the way launch services are purchased.  He said the company would provide details about it this summer.

Bruno declined to say how much Vulcan or ACES will cost.   ULA is paying for the development itself, but, as he said at a recent House Armed Services Committee (HASC) hearing, he will not turn down any help the government might want to offer.  ULA will pay for it out of its profits and he acknowledged that ULA’s parent companies – Boeing and Lockheed Martin – essentially are investing in Vulcan by allowing ULA to use the profits this way.

A video of the press conference is posted on YouTube.

What's Happening in Space Policy April 12-17, 2015

What's Happening in Space Policy April 12-17, 2015

This busy week begins today (Sunday), so lace up your running shoes.   Here is our list of upcoming space policy related events for April 12-17, 2015.  The House and Senate return to work from their Easter break tomorrow.

During the Week

Today, April 12, is the 54th anniversary of Yuri Gagarin’s flight into space aboard Vostok 1, marking the beginning of the human spaceflight era.  It is also the
34th anniversary of the first space shuttle flight (though that is a coincidence, the flight was scheduled for April 10, but postponed by two days at the last minute).  Yuri’s Night celebrations will be held in many locations around the globe.  There is a website where you can check to find if there’s one in your area and, if not, ideas on how to start one.

Before that, though, are three pre-launch briefings associated with SpaceX’s sixth operational cargo launch to the International Space Station (ISS) tomorrow, SpX-6.  The weather forecast is iffy (60 percent chance “go”), but if the launch does take place, SpaceX plans to try again to land the Falcon 9 first stage on its autonomous drone ship whimsically named “Just Read the Instructions.”   Today’s briefings are at 1:30, 3:30 and 5:00 pm ET.  Tomorrow’s launch is at 4:33 pm ET, with a post-launch press conference about 90 minutes later.  All will be broadcast on NASA TV.   All times are subject to change, of course.

Curiously, the United Launch Alliance (ULA) chose the same time as SpaceX’s launch to announce “America’s Next Rocket” at the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs that begins tomorrow and runs through Thursday.  Their event is at 4:00 pm Eastern (2:00 pm local time in Colorado) and will be webcast.   ULA President Tory Bruno will tell the world what name was selected via its recent naming contest and other details of the new “all American” rocket.  ULA currently launches Atlas V and Delta IV.   The debate over the Atlas V’s reliance on Russia’s RD-180 rocket engines has been discussed on this website for the past year (type “RD-180” in the search box above to find those articles).  This rocket is intended to end U.S. reliance on Russia and be more competitive with, among others, SpaceX.  Perhaps by choosing the same time to make this announcement as the SpaceX launch, ULA is starting the competition — for attention, at least — right now.

There likely will be breaking news throughout the week from the Space Symposium, but a lot will be happening elsewhere, too.   On Thursday, NASA Administrator Charlie Bolden will testify to the House Science, Space and Technology Committee in the morning (note that it is at 9:00 am ET, not 10:00 as usual) and to the Commerce-Justice-Science subcommittee of the Senate Appropriations Committee in the afternoon (2:30 pm ET) about NASA’s FY2016 budget request.  The Senate hearing was postponed from March 5 when a snowstorm shut down DC.

Those and the many other events we know about as of this morning are listed below.

Sunday, April 12

Monday, April 13

Monday-Thursday, April 13-16

Monday-Friday, April 13-17

Monday, April 13 – Friday, April 24

Tuesday, April 14

Thursday, April 16

Hyten: No "Fair Competition" If ULA Contract Remains

Hyten: No "Fair Competition" If ULA Contract Remains

Gen. John Hyten, Commander of Air Force Space Command, believes that the government’s cost-plus contract with the United Launch Alliance (ULA) that covers infrastructure and engineering services must be changed if “fair competition” is to be achieved in the national security space launch market.

Testifying to a House Armed Services Committee (HASC) panel on March 25, Hyten said “I don’t think you can have fair competition with that contract in place.  There’ll have to be a change.”

Government payments to ULA for launches of Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles (EELVs) –Atlas V and Delta IV – have two components:  EELV Launch Services (ELS) and EELV Launch Capabilities (ELC).   ELS is a fixed price contract that covers hardware, while ELC is a cost-plus-incentive-fee contract that pays for infrastructure and engineering support.

Hyten said the ELC contract was created because the U.S. launch industry’s industrial base was in a “fragile” state in the mid-2000s.  The robust commercial launch market that had been forecast to develop did not do so.  At the time, Lockheed Martin and Boeing were competitors, offering the Atlas V and Delta IV, respectively, for both commercial and government launches.  Without sufficient commercial launches, the market was insufficient to support both companies against international competition.

The Air Force needed Atlas and Delta to place its satellites into orbit whenever necessary, so “we created the ELC contract as a way to make sure that even if we didn’t launch, and there were years that we launched very small numbers of satellites, there will still be a healthy industrial base,” Hyten explained.

Times have changed, however, and with the emergence of “new entrants” like SpaceX, the time has come to alter the way the government procures launches, according to Hyten.   Mr. Dyke Weatherington, the Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space, Strategic and Intelligence Systems, agreed.  He said DOD is “modifying and continuing to evolve its space launch capability to take advantage of the competitive launch environment that we see coming in the future.”

SpaceX is awaiting certification from the Air Force to be able to compete with ULA for launches of national security satellites.   After assurances that the certification would be complete by the end of last year, and a subsequent announcement by the Air Force of a delay, there appears to be agreement between the two that SpaceX will be certified by this summer.

The March 25 hearing on national security space issues was before the HASC Subcommittee on Strategic Forces, which held a hearing specifically on space launch issues a week earlier.   Hyten testified at both.  Subcommittee chairman Mike Rogers (R-AL) said at the March 25 hearing that he was offering Hyten an opportunity to give his perspectives on the ELC contract because Hyten did not have a chance to do so at the previous hearing.

The March 25 hearing looked broadly at national security space issues and the witnesses were a who’s who of national security space decision-makers.  Topics spanned a broad range of issues, including protecting U.S. satellites from threats by other countries, such as China.   Doug Loverro, Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Space Policy, said that the United States is reacting to the threat posed by China and “making it very clear we have no desire to have a conflict extended to space,” but that the “U.S. will be prepared to defend our space assets.”

A key message repeated by many of the witnesses is that “we can no longer view space as a sanctuary.”   Loverro emphasized that other countries understand U.S. reliance on space assets and “want to take it away from us.  We won’t let them.”   Still, the United States “remains committed to assuring the peaceful use of space by all” because it is a “global good” and a “driver for economic growth, environmental monitoring, verification of treaties and enabler for everyday citizens at home and abroad.”