Texarkana Gazette

GAO REPORT: NASA NEEDS A BACKUP PLAN

Delays on horizon for new crew capsules

- By Marcia Dunn The Associated Press Health & Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

“NASA is considerin­g potential options, but it does not have a contingenc­y plan for ensuring uninterrup­ted U.S.

access.”

—GAO report

NASA needs a backup plan for getting astronauts to space, given additional delays on the horizon for new commercial crew capsules, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office recommende­d Wednesday.

That’s the top suggestion in the GAO’s latest report on the SpaceX and Boeing crew capsules under developmen­t. Both companies have been shooting for test flights by the end of this year. But the GAO warned in its 47-page report that despite progress, further delays are likely. If postponeme­nts keep mounting, the GAO fears there could be a gap in U.S. access to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

With its last shuttle flight seven years ago this month, NASA has been paying Russia up to $82 million a seat to ferry U.S. astronauts to and from the Internatio­nal Space Station. But that contract is up at the end of next year.

“NASA is considerin­g potential options, but iti does not have a contingenc­y plan for ensuring uninterrup­ted U.S. access,” the report by the Congressio­nal watchdog agency stated. The audit also found that NASA lacks a consistent approach in gauging crew risk in these new spacecraft.

“NASA must balance safety with acceptable risk for human spacefligh­t,” the report stated. NASA’s human exploratio­ns chief, William Gerstenmai­er, said the space agency is actively working on options to keep Americans living and working, uninterrup­ted, at the station. He also noted that while the different documentat­ion for measuring crew risk can be confusing, it is up to NASA’s commercial crew program to assure the proper safety guidelines.

SpaceX and Boeing have been vying to be the first to return Americans to space from U.S. soil since 2014, three years after NASA’s shuttle program ended.

That’s when NASA awarded contracts totaling nearly $7 billion to SpaceX and Boeing to develop crew capsules and demonstrat­e them in flight. The agreement called for the spacecraft to be certified by 2017.

The SpaceX capsule is a beefed-up, human-rated version of the Dragon capsule already used to deliver cargo; Boeing’s craft is named Starliner.

Each company plans a test flight without passengers, before putting astronauts on board.

Currently, there are three Americans at the space station, along with two Russians and a German.

 ?? NASA via Associated Press ?? ABOVE:In this 2016 photo made available by NASA, a mockup of Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner spacecraft, in developmen­t in partnershi­p with NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, splashes into a 20-foot-deep basin at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., during testing of the spacecraft’s landing systems design. On Wednesday, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office said NASA needs a backup plan for gettingast­ronauts to space, given additional delays on the horizon for new commercial crew capsules.
NASA via Associated Press ABOVE:In this 2016 photo made available by NASA, a mockup of Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner spacecraft, in developmen­t in partnershi­p with NASA’s Commercial Crew Program, splashes into a 20-foot-deep basin at NASA’s Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., during testing of the spacecraft’s landing systems design. On Wednesday, the U.S. Government Accountabi­lity Office said NASA needs a backup plan for gettingast­ronauts to space, given additional delays on the horizon for new commercial crew capsules.

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