Houston Chronicle

Spaceport refocuses after losing major bid

Ellington-based facility runner-up for $200M project

- By Andrea Rumbaugh

The Houston Spaceport has set its sights on three major projects after losing out on a rocket engine manufactur­ing facility that could have brought a $200 million investment and 342 well-paying jobs.

Bob Mitchell, president of the Bay Area Houston Economic Partnershi­p, said two of those projects are as large or larger than the Blue Origin project Houston just missed in terms of jobs and financial investment.

“This is not something that’s going to be a complete success overnight,” he said of the Spaceport. “It takes time.”

This week, officials confirmed Houston was one of more than 20 pursuers for the Blue Origin project, created by Amazon founder Jeff Bezos. As runner-up, Houston remained on the list of potential sites until June, when the project instead chose Hunts-

ville, Ala., which boasts an experience­d workforce and powerful political support.

The project had been seen as a way to jump-start developmen­t at the Spaceport, which wants to create a cluster of aerospace companies but so far has just one tenant. So losing out to Alabama was a setback for Houston. But those involved in the local effort remain optimistic they will land their next project and say they’ve learned key lessons from their losing Blue Origin bid.

“We can’t speak to what other entities had to offer, but we prepared and offered a competitiv­e proposal,” Houston Airport System spokesman Bill Begley said in a statement. “The process showed that the Houston Spaceport is a viable player in the growing commercial spaceport and aviation field.”

But City Councilman Dave Martin, whose district includes the Ellington Airport-based spaceport, complained that federal and state officials should have acted more vigorously.

“We didn’t want it as bad as their political leaders wanted it,” he said.

Martin praised work by the Bay Area Houston Economic Partnershi­p and the Houston Airport System and said the region’s culture, restaurant­s, sports and museums appeal to recent college graduates who could work for Blue Origin.

“And we’re losing out to Huntsville, Alabama? I’m scratching my head on that one,” Martin said. “And it all comes down to, Senator Shelby is kicking our butt.”

He referred to U.S. Sen. Richard Shelby, R-Ala., who sits on the Appropriat­ions Committee and chairs its Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies subcommitt­ee. They have jurisdicti­on over NASA’s annual budget and appropriat­ions, and Shelby is a vocal and important ally of space companies.

‘A perfect storm’

Mitchell and others cited a variety of factors that gave Huntsville the edge over Houston, despite its long ties to the space industry as home to NASA’s Johnson Space Center. Northern Alabama has a cluster of aerospace companies focused on building rocket engines; thus, it has cultivated a high-tech aerospace manufactur­ing work force.

NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville designed, built and tested the Saturn V rocket that carried astronauts on the Apollo missions to the moon. It developed rocket engines and tanks for the space shuttle fleet, and it’s home to the developmen­t of NASA’s Space Launch System rocket.

United Launch Alliance has a facility in nearby Decatur focused on the manufactur­e, assembly and integratio­n of launch vehicles and Aerojet Rocketdyne has a Huntsville facility with engineerin­g expertise in solid and liquid propulsion, according to their respective websites.

If Blue Origin had selected Houston, San Jacinto College was standing by to help develop a local workforce. Chancellor Brenda Hellyer said the school would have adapted existing jobtrainin­g programs for the petrochemi­cal and aerospace industries. Classes would have been developed around the welding, robotics, instrument­ation and equipment testing positions Blue Origin would require.

“We were brought in to find out what their needs were and to figure out how we were going to be able to help,” Hellyer said.

Blue Origin likely had another objective in mind, said Bill Ostrove, space market analyst for Forecast Internatio­nal. The space company, currently competing against Aerojet Rocketdyne to build an engine for United Launch Alliance’s new Vulcan rocket, might have selected Huntsville so that United Launch Alliance wouldn’t choose Aerojet Rocketdyne simply because they both have locations in northern Alabama.

Blue Origin’s new facility in Huntsville would build the BE-4 engine being developed for United Launch Alliance, as well as Blue Origin’s New Glenn reusable launch system.

“There was kind of a perfect storm,” Ostrove said.

Focus on JSC expertise

Blue Origin’s new facility will be in Cummings Research Park, the nation’s second-largest research park. Constructi­on can begin once an engine production contract with United Launch Alliance is awarded, according to a June news release from Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey.

Blue Origin did not answer emailed questions concerning speculatio­n that its facility might be built only if its engine is selected for the Vulcan rocket.

Ostrove added that Blue Origin is the favored supplier and will likely win the bid. United Launch Alliance and Blue Origin are jointly funding developmen­t of the BE-4 rocket engine by Blue Origin.

“If ULA decides to continue developmen­t of the Vulcan rocket, and it is powered by the BE-4 engine, Blue Origin has announced its intention to manufactur­e those engines in North Alabama,” Shelby told the Chronicle in an email. “I have long believed that the Russianmad­e RD-180 engine should be replaced with an American engine, and I have been working with my colleagues in the Senate to find an alternativ­e that will enable a smooth transition away from the Russian rocket engine while maintainin­g America’s policy of assured access to space.”

Blue Origin will employ up to 342 people in the new facility with an average salary of $75,000 and competitiv­e benefits.

It will make an approximat­ely $200 million capital investment in the state, the news release said.

The state of Alabama offered a host of incentives, including a 3 percent jobs credit, 1.5 percent investment credit and 20-year property tax abatement, where the state approved years 11 to 20 with an estimated value of $647,745.

Ostrove said Houston might have better luck with a facility focused on human spacefligh­t, an area where Johnson Space Center has developed expertise, or other sectors where Houston has a foothold.

A JSC spokespers­on said the NASA center is “supportive, involved and highly values its place in the Houston community,” but it would decline to comment on business decisions made in the private sector.

Strong commitment

Despite the setback, Begley said the Airport System’s commitment to the spaceport is “as strong as ever.”

The Houston Spaceport recently announced that it started searching for a design-build firm to develop roads and utilities. It is also building a new air traffic control tower at Ellington Airport that will have a missioncon­trol area.

“Blue Origin is a high-profile company and it would have been absolutely fantastic if we managed to attract them to Houston,” said David Alexander, director of the Rice Space Institute at Rice University. “But the spaceport plans are going ahead.”

Alexander said technology for horizontal­ly launched spacecraft, the only kind permitted from Houston, isn’t developed enough to warrant a spaceport terminal. So it’s smart to first develop an aerospace community that could position the spaceport to take advantage of both the growth in commercial space ventures and ultimately horizontal-launching technology once it becomes available.

Alexander also emphasized local expertise from Johnson Space Center, access to colleges and universiti­es, connection­s to other industries, and an internatio­nal transporta­tion system provided by the Port of Houston as well as Bush Interconti­nental and Hobby airports.

The fact that the Houston Spaceport was runner-up for the Blue Origin facility shows how far it has come since it was licensed two years ago, Alexander said. It also illustrate­s the economic benefits the spaceport could one day provide.

“Things don’t just fall off of trees,” he said. “You have to work for them. And that’s what they’re doing. I think in the long run it will really pay off.”

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press ?? Richard Shelby, a Republican from Alabama and the senior senator from that state, sits on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee that has jurisdicti­on over NASA’s annual budget.
J. Scott Applewhite / Associated Press Richard Shelby, a Republican from Alabama and the senior senator from that state, sits on the Senate Appropriat­ions Committee that has jurisdicti­on over NASA’s annual budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States