. Medical and Hospital News .




.
OPINION SPACE
Congress and NASA: expedite commercial crew
by S. Alan Stern and Frank DiBello for The Space Review
Boulder CO (SPX) Nov 09, 2011

File image.

The end of the Space Shuttle program this summer caused the US to voluntarily give up its capability to put our own astronauts into orbit. By doing so before a new human spaceflight launch system is in place, the nation created a Russian dependency to sustain our $100-billion space station investment, and relinquished our role as the leader in human space exploration to Russia.

When policy makers accepted this bad situation, it was expected to persist for only two or three years, making a bad situation perhaps palatable given the tough fiscal times.

But now, barely 100 days into our human spaceflight access gap, it's looking more and more like the gap will lengthen to five or six or even more years to 2016 or 2017-possibly even to 2018-or beyond.

Why is this happening?
Congress is to blame for this by planning to gut the Administration's request of $850 million for its Commercial Crew program-the fastest paced and surest effort within NASA to restore US human space access to orbit.

Forces within NASA are also to blame, for saddling the Commercial Crew program with costly and schedule-stretching delays created by complex and onerous contracting methods and project oversight practices, which themselves add several years to the gap.

What are our trusted stewards of this great nation's civil space program thinking? Consider, for as long as the US is in this gap:

+ All access to the International Space Station (ISS) is dependent on a problem-prone Russian transportation system, jeopardizing our ability to staff the station. Both Proton and Soyuz have had technical mishaps in recent years, including two launch failures in the past few months that, if repeated, could very realistically create the need to abandon the ISS.

+ The high cost of US astronaut transport aboard Russia's Soyuz is draining our human spaceflight budget and costing thousands of American jobs at home. These costs, estimated to be two to three times as expensive per seat as what US commercial crew systems will cost, are also significantly slowing our ability to begin exploring beyond Earth orbit.

+ Our astronaut corps is limited to two or three people being launched every year, and our ability to fully utilize our $100-billion space station is severely hampered. Only when the gap ends can we expect to resume a significant rate of astronaut launches and substantially greater research utilization of space station.

+ Our perception as the world's leader in human spaceflight is damaged, for no nation that is wholly dependent on another nation for its human access to space can be considered the world leader in spaceflight.

None of this is good. There is no silver lining here: not for our economy, not for our standing as a world leader, not for our investment in the ISS, and certainly not for NASA's role in inspiring science, technology, education, and mathematics (STEM) education.

What should be done? We believe that Congress, the Administration, and NASA must come to consider our gap in human launch capabilities a matter too debilitating to extend by any amount, and take the following actions:

+ Congress, for its part, should fund the development of commercial crew launch capabilities to orbit at the requested level of $850 million, even if that means slowing other development efforts within NASA.

+ NASA, for its part, should streamline the business and technical processes it imposes on its commercial crew providers with the goal of ending our human space launch capability gap as soon as is practically feasible.

+ And the Administration, for its part, should be urging Congress to fully fund commercial crew programs and directing NASA administrator Charles Bolden to mobilize NASA to achieve the fastest possible commercial crew launch capability to ISS.

It is time for elected leaders, NASA, and the nation's space community to wake up to the urgency of this situation. It is time for action on each of their parts. It is time for leadership.

It is time for the great institutions of this great nation to respond by shrinking, rather than lengthening, our human spaceflight launch capability gap.

This article first appeared in The Space Review: S. Alan Stern is a planetary scientist, aerospace consultant, the director of the Florida Space Institute, and NASA's former associate administrator in charge of science. Frank DiBello is the President and CEO of Space Florida. Formerly, he was the founder and managing partner of KPMG Peat Marwick's Commercial Space and Advanced Technologies practice.

Related Links
-
Space Analysis and Space OpEds




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



OPINION SPACE
China should have own ambitions for space development
Beijing (XNA) Oct 10, 2011
The launch of the Tiangong-1 spacecraft has attracted the attention of the world and some TV viewers in some foreign countries even watched the live broadcast in late September. The public opinion is generally neutral. Some have made objective evaluation of the event, giving good-willed blessings to China's technological progress and expressed desires to extend cooperation with China, whil ... read more


OPINION SPACE
Thaksin keeps low profile in Thai flood crisis

Japan lower house approves $156bn recovery budget

Thai opposition challenges PM over flood budget

Tokyo city starts radiation tests on food in shops

OPINION SPACE
In GPS case, US court debates '1984' scenario

Galileo satellites handed over to control centre in Germany

Map mischief creates furore in India

Russia launches navigation satellites

OPINION SPACE
The selective advantage of being on the edge of a migration wave

Asian couples rush to wed on auspicious date

Erasing the signs of aging in cells is now a reality

The benefits of being the first to settle

OPINION SPACE
Bigger birds are harder hit by human noise

Two rhino species bite the dust: Red List

Philippine town claims world's largest croc title

New study reveals coral reefs may support much more biodiversity than previously thought

OPINION SPACE
Scientists find big chink in malaria's armour

Analysis reveals malaria as ancient, adaptive and persistent foe

Clinton says AIDS-free generation is US priority

Novel treatment protects mice against malaria; approach may work in humans as well

OPINION SPACE
Clinton presses China on Tibet, blind lawyer

Chinese artist Ai Weiwei vows to fight tax bill

Tibet protester sets himself alight in Nepal: police

China's 'soft power' push stumbles at the movies

OPINION SPACE
Somali pirate attacks hit record level

China to send armed patrols on Mekong: report

S.Africa navy chief warns pirates could head south

Kenya to pursue kidnappers into Somalia: minister

OPINION SPACE
IMF chief calls for 'political clarity' in Greece, Italy

Japan machinery orders fall 8.2% in September

IMF chief holds talks in China amid eurozone turmoil

IMF chief warns world economy risks 'downward spiral'


.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement