World

Three firms share US$1.1b of NASA space taxi work

August 04, 2012

PASADENA, California, Aug 4 — NASA will pay more than US$1 billion (RM3.1 billion) over the next 21 months to three companies to develop commercial spaceships capable of flying astronauts to the International Space Station, the agency said yesterday.

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off in this file photo of its debut launch in Cape Canaveral, Florida, June 4, 2010. — Reuters picThe lion’s share of the US$1.1 billion allotted for the next phase of NASA’s so-called “Commercial Crew” programme will be split between Boeing and Space Exploration Technologies, a privately held firm run by Internet entrepreneur Elon Musk.

Boeing will receive US$460 million to continue developing its CST-100 capsule, which is intended to fly aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket. ULA is a partnership of Boeing and Lockheed Martin.

Space Exploration Technologies, or SpaceX, was awarded US$440 million to upgrade its Dragon cargo capsule, which flies on the firm’s Falcon 9 rocket, to carry people.

In May, a Dragon capsule became the first privately owned spacecraft to reach the station, a US$100 billion outpost that flies 390km above Earth. The test flight was part of a related NASA programme to hire commercial companies to fly cargo to the station.

Privately held Sierra Nevada Corp received a partial award of US$212.5 million for work on its Dream Chaser, a winged vehicle that resembles a miniature space shuttle that also launches on an Atlas 5 rocket.

All three firms are prior recipients of NASA space taxi development work. The new awards will more than triple NASA’s investments in commercial crew programmes, which so far total US$365 million.

Unlike previous NASA development programmes, costs are shared between the government and its selected partners.

“The companies also are bringing money to the table. This is a way of allowing the United States to lead in the development of new space systems that are human-capability and then taking those systems for commercial purposes, as well as for NASA purposes in the future,” programme manager Ed Mango said.

Since the space shuttles were retired last year, NASA is dependent on partners Russia, Europe and Japan to reach the station. Russia will remain the sole entity capable of flying crew until US companies develop systems, which NASA hopes will be within five years.

Shut out of the competition was Alliant Techsystems which hoped to parlay an ongoing unfunded NASA partnership agreement into a paying contract.

Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos’s startup Blue Origin, which won US$25.7 million during two predecessor programmes, did not bid for the integrated design contracts awarded yesterday.

Three other firms — Space Operations, American Aerospace and Space Design — submitted proposals but were eliminated for not meeting requirements, NASA’s associate administrator for space operations Bill Gerstenmaier said during a conference call with reporters. — Reuters

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