Orlando Sentinel

Audit: Soaring Artemis costs a threat to deep space exploratio­n

- By Richard Tribou

NASA’s goal to reduce the costs of the powerful Space Launch System rocket for its Artemis program by 50% was called “highly unrealisti­c” and a threat to its deep space exploratio­n plans, according to a report by NASA’s Office of the Inspector General released on Thursday.

The audit says the costs to produce one SLS rocket through its proposed fixed-cost contract will still top $2.5 billion, even though NASA thinks it can shrink that through “workforce reductions, manufactur­ing and contractin­g efficienci­es, and expanding the SLS’s user base.”

“Given the enormous costs of the Artemis campaign, failure to achieve substantia­l savings will significan­tly hinder the sustainabi­lity of NASA’s deep space human exploratio­n efforts,” the report warns.

Already, the Biden administra­tion is requesting its largest NASA budget ever for the next fiscal year, although a Republican-led U.S. House is likely to kneecap some of NASA’s requests.

The audit looked at NASA’s plans to shift from its current setup among multiple suppliers for the hardware to a sole-sourced services contract that would include the production, systems integratio­n and launch of at least five SLS flights beginning with Artemis V currently slated for as early as 2029.

NASA’s goal for the Artemis program, set during the Obama administra­tion, is still to land a human on Mars by 2040.

NASA’s claim it could get those costs to $1.25 billion per rocket was taken to task by the audit.

“NASA’s aspiration­al goal to achieve a cost savings of 50% is highly unrealisti­c. Specifical­ly, our review determined that cost saving initiative­s in several SLS production contracts … were not significan­t,” the audit reads.

It does find that rocket costs could approach $2 billion through the first 10 SLS rockets under the

new contract, a reduction of 20%.

Artemis I used the SLS rocket that with 8.8 million pounds of thrust launched from Kennedy Space Center in November 2022 becoming the most powerful rocket to ever make it to orbit. It sent the Orion spacecraft on an uncrewed flight to orbit the moon.

Artemis II will fly with four astronauts on a short trip around the moon aiming for launch as early as November 2024 while a more complicate­d Artemis III mission hopes to return humans including the first woman to the lunar surface as early as December 2025. Artemis IV is on NASA’s calendar for 2028 and is aimed at helping construct the Gateway lunar space station to support moon landing missions.

Through 2025, the audit stated its Artemis missions will have topped $93 billion, which includes billions more than originally announced in 2012 as years of delays and cost increases plagued the leadup to Artemis I. The SLS rocket represents 26% of that cost to the tune of $23.8 billion.

Boeing is the primary contractor for the core stage working with Aerojet Rocketdyne for the core stage’s four RS-25 engines while Northrop Grumman provides the two solid rocket boosters. Lockheed Martin is the prime contractor for Orion while United Launch Alliance and the European Space Agency also have a hand in the SLS and Orion programs.

The new contract called the Exploratio­n Production and Operations Contract (EPOC) would award the SLS contract to a joint venture of Boeing and Northrop Grumman called Deep Space Transport, LLC. The contract would include an option for an additional five launches for a total of 10. It’s targeting a larger version of SLS called Block 1B that will use a new Exploratio­n Upper Stage that will increase the rocket’s cargo capacity.

Before entering the new single-source contract, NASA also plans for a three-year pre-EPOC contract that the audit commended so that NASA can continue direct oversight of the new combined company while also giving time for Boeing to improve its assembly line production­s.

It also warns that some aspects of future Artemis launches could fall outside the fixed-cost contract, and noted there was a $4.3 billion increase in cost-reimbursab­le contracts leading up to the Artemis I launch.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? The sun sets over Artemis I, NASA’s heavy-lift lunar rocket system, after the scrub of the second launch attempt on Sept. 3, 2022, at Kennedy Space Center.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL The sun sets over Artemis I, NASA’s heavy-lift lunar rocket system, after the scrub of the second launch attempt on Sept. 3, 2022, at Kennedy Space Center.

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