The Province

SpaceX counts down to its ‘epic moment’

First trip to carry astronauts into space on a privately owned rocket is scheduled for Wednesday

- DANA HULL AND JULIE JOHNSSON

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — Elon Musk is about to face his biggest test after almost two decades as a space entreprene­ur: launching human beings into orbit.

If the weather holds and there are no technical issues, a SpaceX Dragon capsule atop a Falcon 9 rocket will blast off from Cape Canaveral at 1:33 p.m. PDT on Wednesday.

Two NASA astronauts — Bob Behnken and Doug Hurley — will be on board, with a docking at the Internatio­nal Space Station scheduled for 19 hours later.

The history of space flight is made up of moments etched into humanity’s collective memory, including Yuri Gagarin’s orbit of the Earth in 1961, Neil Armstrong’s “one small step” onto the moon in 1969 and the loss of Space Shuttle Challenger in 1986.

While SpaceX’s upcoming launch may not end up ranking with those events, it will mark the first-ever ride to orbit on a privately owned vehicle — and the first time astronauts have flown from U.S. soil since the shuttle program ended in 2011.

“We haven’t had two humans shoot up into space on a commercial spacecraft ever. That’s an absolute first. It’s an epic moment,” said Luigi Peluso, an aerospace analyst with AlixPartne­rs. “Space is still a dangerous game, and when you launch with people on board it’s a whole different level of intensity. And it’s not just about getting them there safely — it’s also about bringing them back.”

Musk founded Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp. in 2002 with the ultimate goal of enabling people to live on other planets. The National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion has been a key partner and customer every step of the way for the Hawthorne, California-based company. A cargo-only version of SpaceX’s Dragon capsule already makes regular runs to the space station.

In 2014, NASA awarded SpaceX and entrenched rival Boeing Co. a combined $6.8 billion in contracts to revive America’s ability to fly to the orbiting lab without buying seats on Russian Soyuz capsules. By crossing the finish line ahead of a company with Apollo-era roots, SpaceX will underscore its metamorpho­sis from upstart to power player.

“It’s definitely a bit of a black eye to Boeing,” said George Ferguson, analyst with Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. He said the hit is less to the aerospace titan’s pocketbook and more to its reputation for engineerin­g prowess, which has already been badly sullied by two deadly crashes of its best-selling jet, the 737 Max.

For a nation scarred by the health and economic impacts of the coronaviru­s and slowly emerging from stay-home orders, the SpaceX launch will be a chance to look skyward. For NASA, the event will also be a distractio­n from intrigue surroundin­g the abrupt departure earlier this week of its human space flight chief, Douglas Loverro.

The shuffle placed more responsibi­lity on officials such as Steve Jurczyk, NASA’s associate administra­tor and highest-ranking civil servant, who stepped in for Loverro to make the final decision to proceed with the mission.

“NASA is a very resilient organizati­on. There’s nobody in the organizati­on that’s irreplacea­ble,” said Wayne Hale, a former space shuttle program manager and an architect of NASA’s commercial space foray. “It’s unfortunat­e that this happens and he had to leave, but people are already stepping up.”

While NASA has discourage­d people from mobbing Cape Canaveral because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the agency is planning hours of programmin­g around the #LaunchAmer­ica event. Vice-president Mike Pence said he plans to attend the launch. President Donald Trump also plans to travel to Florida to watch, Bloomberg News reported Friday.

But the weather forecast — clouds, rainstorms and isolated thundersto­rms — could delay the big event. If the May 27 launch is “scrubbed” for weather, the backup date and time is Saturday, May 30, at 3:22 p.m. Florida time.

Adding to the excitement is SpaceX’s knack for milking big events, as it did when it sent a cherry-red Tesla Roadster to deep space with its largest rocket. The voyage will usher in a new era of commercial space flight.

“This is a real breakthrou­gh for space developmen­t,” said Lori Garver, a former NASA deputy administra­tor and current CEO of the Earthrise Alliance. “This plan has been in the works for a decade. You’ve turned over the keys to the private sector for lowearth orbit, which frees up NASA to do other things. And it will open up space, ultimately, for paying tourists.”

There were plenty of skeptics — including Armstrong and other space flight pioneers — who thought this day would never come. When then-President Barack Obama decided in 2010 to turn space-station treks over to private contractor­s, SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rocket hadn’t yet flown and few could have predicted it would dominate commercial satellite launches within a matter of years.

Still, the milestone crewed flight is years behind schedule, and NASA has paid $3.5 billion to purchase 52 rides to space from Russia since 2011, including a seat on a Soyuz rocket later this year. The agency is confident that U.S. commercial spacecraft will take over the missions this year and next.

Boeing is still working through dozens of corrective actions that NASA recommende­d after the company’s Starliner capsule missed a rendezvous with the station in December. The company hasn’t yet scheduled a do-over, or its first flight with humans.

 ?? BILL INGALLS/NASA VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley, left, and Robert Behnken are scheduled to launch into space on Wednesday from Cape Canaveral in a SpaceX Dragon capsule atop a Falcon 9 rocket.
BILL INGALLS/NASA VIA GETTY IMAGES NASA astronauts Douglas Hurley, left, and Robert Behnken are scheduled to launch into space on Wednesday from Cape Canaveral in a SpaceX Dragon capsule atop a Falcon 9 rocket.

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