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As NASA Aims For The Moon, An Aging Space Station Faces An Uncertain Future
National Public Radio ^ | July 7, 2019 | Nell Greenfieldboyce

Posted on 07/08/2019 8:37:01 AM PDT by Jagermonster

When a rocket carrying the first module of the International Space Station blasted off from Kazakhstan in November of 1998, NASA officials said that the station would serve as an orbiting home for astronauts and cosmonauts for at least 15 years.

It's now been over 18 years that the station has been continuously occupied by people. The place is impressive, with more living space than a six-bedroom house, two bathrooms and a large bay window for looking down at Earth.

NASA and its international partners have spent decades and more than $100 billion to make the station a reality. The trouble is, as the agency sets its sights on returning people to the moon, the aging station has become a financial burden. And it's not clear what its future holds.

NASA spends between $3 billion and $4 billion a year operating the station and flying people back and forth. That's about half the agency's budget for human exploration of space.

The United States and the other participating nations have pledged to fund the station until at least 2024, but it will surely last longer than that. Gilles Leclerc, head of space exploration at the Canadian Space Agency, says there's no way that the international partners would come together in five years and decide to just crash the station into the ocean to so that resources could be directed to other space goals.

"It would be a waste. We cannot ditch the International Space Station. There's just too much invested," says Leclerc. "It's quite clear, it's unanimous between the partners that we continue to need a space station in low Earth orbit."

So NASA has floated one money-saving idea: turn the space station over to the private sector. That's why, a few weeks ago, NASA officials held a big press event at the Nasdaq stock market's MarketSite in New York City. "NASA is opening the international space station to commercial opportunities and marketing these opportunities as we've never done before," said the agency's chief financial officer, Jeff DeWit. "The commercialization of low Earth orbit will enable NASA to focus resources to land the first woman and next man on the moon by 2024, as the first phase in creating a sustainable lunar presence to prepare for future missions to Mars."

Astronaut Christina Koch appeared in video beamed down from space. "We are so excited to be part of NASA as our home and laboratory in space transitions to into being accessible to expanded commercial and marketing opportunities, as well as to private astronauts," she said.

All this produced a sense of déjà vu in John Logsdon, a space historian with George Washington University. Back in the 1980s, when Ronald Reagan's administration first proposed building a permanent space station, part of the pitch was "the idea that it could be a place for a wide variety of commercial activities, with billions of dollars of economic payoff," says Logsdon. "So here we are in 2019, finally going to test that hypothesis." When reporters asked how much revenue could come in from new commercial activities on the station, however, NASA officials wouldn't give any numbers, saying there was too much uncertainty.

"The 12 industry studies NASA commissioned last year estimated revenue projections for future low-Earth orbit destinations across a variety of markets, and those projections varied significantly as a result of uncertainty associated with these future markets," a NASA spokesperson told NPR. "The markets and services that will generate revenue need to be cultivated by the creative and entrepreneurial private sector."

"That is the right answer because they don't know yet," says Tommy Sanford, executive director of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation.

But if the space station became commercially-operated or even privately owned, NASA could become just one of many customers.

"You need to be focused on adding as many customers as possible and hoping to reach a tipping point, at some point, where you retain all of them," says Sanford. "Then that eventually lowers your cost, because you are one of many customers. You aren't bearing the entire cost of the infrastructure and transportation." Some question whether any business could make a go of running a space station without the government still ponying up a ton of money.

"Candidly, the scant commercial interest shown in the station over its nearly 20 years of operation give us pause about the agency's current plans," NASA Inspector General Paul Martin told members of Congress last year. As all of these discussions go on, the station keeps getting older. Space is a harsh environment. The hardware is wearing out, and major components are only certified until 2028.

"Space station really has up to, say, less than 10 years of lifetime," says Dava Newman, a scientist at MIT and a former NASA deputy administrator.

She loves the station and has flown experiments on it. But she thinks with time running out, there needs to be a strategic plan for its end.

"There might be some elements of space station that the private [sector] might be able to take over, a module or two," she says. "All of that needs to be put into place, probably with government funding."

Eventually, big components of the station will have to crash back down to Earth. Asked when NASA expected to deorbit the station, a spokesperson for the agency said that no specific year is being targeted.

"Transition from the space station will occur once commercial habitable destinations are available and can support NASA's needs as one of many customers," the spokesperson said.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: aerospace; artemis1; boondoggle; elonmusk; falcon9; falconheavy; iss; lewisandclark; moon; nasa; orion; privatize; spacex; themoon
Discussion of privatizing the International Space Station. Lots of big, nifty pictures at the source.
1 posted on 07/08/2019 8:37:01 AM PDT by Jagermonster
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To: Jagermonster

Both the ISS and the shuttle program were expensive setbacks to space exploration. The shuttle could do nothing except haul cargo to and from low earth orbit. The ISS is parked in a useless orbit, serving only as a zero gravity laboratory. Where has any of that gotten us?


2 posted on 07/08/2019 8:45:37 AM PDT by Telepathic Intruder
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To: rktman

Ping.


3 posted on 07/08/2019 8:53:48 AM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: Telepathic Intruder
I know that the ISS could have been far more useful in another orbit, but that doesn't mean we didn't get anything from it. Some examples of things developed on or for the ISS: (1) Small scale water purification systems; (2) eye tracking for laser eye surgery; (3) robot arm (Canadian arm) refined and used in surgical applications.

As with the earlier space program, it isn't so much the doing things in space that has practical benefits, but the problems that get solved to allow us to do things in space. For example, MRI was initially developed to quality check rocket booster nozzles to prevent unplanned kabooms, but, further refined, is now used to see what your insides look like.
4 posted on 07/08/2019 8:56:31 AM PDT by Jagermonster ("God is love, and he who abides in love abides in God, and God in him." 1 John 4:16, NKJV.)
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To: Jagermonster

There are added bonuses that result from any space program. But in this case there were no benefits to space exploration itself. That is more in line with the purpose of NASA. Although we’ve continued to send robotic probes out, there’s been nothing in the way of establishing a real presence in space. Some may say we don’t need one, but one day we may also find that the Chinese are mining asteroids and building cities on the moon.


5 posted on 07/08/2019 9:20:10 AM PDT by Telepathic Intruder
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To: Jagermonster
An Aging Space Station Faces An Uncertain Future

Aging Space Station?!

It's a lot younger than Elizabeth Warren or Kamala Harris.

6 posted on 07/08/2019 9:43:08 AM PDT by Steely Tom ([Seth Rich] == [the Democrat's John Dean])
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To: Jagermonster

Give it an outward nugde and send it to deep space.


7 posted on 07/08/2019 9:45:53 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: BenLurkin
Give it an outward nugde and send it to deep space.

That nudge would have to increase ISS velocity by more than 7000 mph. That's the difference between LEO velocity and escape velocity.

8 posted on 07/08/2019 9:50:40 AM PDT by Steely Tom ([Seth Rich] == [the Democrat's John Dean])
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To: Steely Tom

Okay then. A downward nudge onto someplace we don’t like.


9 posted on 07/08/2019 9:53:57 AM PDT by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire. Or both.)
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To: SunkenCiv

*ping*


10 posted on 07/08/2019 10:31:51 AM PDT by fieldmarshaldj (Who will think of the gerbils ? Just say no to Buttgiggity !)
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To: BenLurkin
The scary part would be if someone or something nudged it back at us a few years later.
11 posted on 07/08/2019 11:55:12 AM PDT by Viking2002 (Free James Woods!!!)
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To: Jagermonster

I’m still waiting for the Space Station depicted in the Movie 2001 capable of creating Artificial Gravity.

That or Elysium...


12 posted on 07/08/2019 11:59:08 AM PDT by Kickass Conservative (Socialism is a gateway Ideology.)
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To: Jagermonster

Skylab was big. We could launch several similar sized ones and put them together for a much bigger space station.
https://www.space.com/21106-nasa-skylab-2-space-station.html

Google: skylab vs iss size
Click on images


13 posted on 07/08/2019 9:14:12 PM PDT by minnesota_bound
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