Space Access Update #120 9/22/10

Space Access Update #121  2/16/11

Copyright 2011 by Space Access Society

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This week, the House of Representatives is debating a new Continuing Resolution
(CR) that will appropriate funds for the Federal Government for the rest of
federal fiscal year 2011 (FY’11, October 1 2010 through September 30
2011.)  (Background: The entire US
government is currently funded by a Continuing Resolution, a stopgap budget bill
that continues funding at the previous year’s levels when Congress, as they did
last year,  fails to pass normal budget
appropriations.  The existing CR runs out
this March 4th.)  And Monday, the White
House released its proposed FY’12 federal budget.

 

As regards NASA Exploration
funding, our view is that the CR is pretty good as-is, while the FY’12 budget
proposal could be better but is more or less acceptable.  Unfortunately, neither the House FY’11 CR nor
the White House NASA FY’12 budget is a final product.  Both are opening positions in a negotiating
process among the House, Senate, and White House, a process that will likely be
particularly volatile this year.  Our
read of the political factors is that the ongoing attempt to reform NASA human
space exploration into actual usefulness could be easily be gutted in the
coming months if we stand by and do nothing. 
The other side of that coin is, there is a possibility for significant
improvements if we persuasively sell our case.

 

Bottom line, it’s time to get
involved again.  As the process unfolds
over the coming weeks and months we expect multiple opportunities for specific
action, but for the moment what we have for you is our overview of the
situation, with (for those of you of an activist bent) some thoughts on what
would be useful to educate the Congress about in the meantime.

 

          The FY’11 CR, House Version

 

The new House CR does several
interesting things.  It sets overall NASA
funding at $18.4 billion, down approximately 1.5% from 2010’s $18.7 billion.  It cancels the “Shelby Amendment”
that’s been delaying final shutdown of even the parts of Constellation (notably
Ares 1) that nobody expects to keep.  And
it gives NASA HQ surprising freedom in implementing planned Exploration reforms
by reprogramming money between NASA funding accounts for the rest of the fiscal
year.  This CR largely carries over 2010
amounts to this year’s accounts, but then exempts NASA’s Space Operations
(Station and Shuttle), Aeronautics (where a bunch of new Exploration Technology
work was slated to go this year) and Education accounts from the usual
Congressional reprogramming limits of 5% max decrease/10% max increase on any
one account.

 

Presumably the surplus in
Space Operations from this year’s shutdown of the Shuttle program can then go
to top up Aeronautics to get the new Exploration Technology projects underway,
and possibly also to top up the Exploration account (though to no more than a
10% increase) for expanded Commercial Crew and Cargo (CCDev)
work.  The main requirement imposed is
that NASA HQ report back to Congress with a spending plan within 60 days of CR
passage – not a problem, we expect, as HQ has known what they want to do this
year for months already.

 

We do not expect passage of
this House version CR to be simple or straightforward.  NASA is only cut 1.5%, but this CR makes
considerably larger cuts elsewhere that the Senate, the White House, or both
will almost certainly strongly oppose. 
NASA FY’11 funding could possibly be cut further in the compromises likely
before a final CR is passed and signed. 
Worse, there will almost certainly be attempts in the Congress (both
House and Senate) to mandate larger slices of the available NASA funding for
SLS and MPCV, eating everybody else’s lunch. 

 

          SLS/MPCV Background

 

SLS is “Space Launch
System”, the new Congressionally mandated and specified heavy lifter.  SLS as specified looks remarkably like the
old Ares 5, contractors and all (regardless of whether that’s legal without a
re-compete.)  MPCV is Multi-Purpose Crew
Vehicle, the Orion capsule by another name. 
SLS and MPCV were the result of a compromise last summer.  The Senate NASA Authorization bill, s.3729,
allocated 2/3rds of the $4 billion NASA Exploration budget to keeping Ares 5
and Orion alive under new names, as opposed to the House version that would
have given these projects 9/10ths of the Exploration budget.  Under the circumstances, we held our nose and
worked for the Senate version; 1/3rd of the Exploration budget for actual
exploration preparations was hugely better than 1/10th.

 

Congress also mandated last
summer that SLS and MPCV would fly in far less time for far less money than had
been planned for Ares/Orion.    You may
recall that the Constellation program was cancelled when Ares 1 and Orion projected
costs to first flight in 2019 passed $40 billion, climbing fast – the last
detailed estimate anyone bothered to make said it could run $49 billion to
first flight.  Needless to say, this was
a major increase from original estimates. 
For what it’s worth, SLS and MPCV are mandated in s.3729 to fly in 2016,
roughly half the time, for roughly half that much money.

 

At that point it becomes
blindingly obvious (to us at least) that the real goal is continuing jobs and
contracts in Ares/Orion congressional districts, no matter what damage it does
to work on making actual future NASA space exploration affordable.  NASA HQ has very politely reported back to
the Congress that SLS/MPCV simply can’t fly as Congressionally specified for
the available money.  The continued
insistence by SLS advocates in Congress that “it’s the law!” would be
hilarious if they weren’t working so hard to waste scarce billions on an
obvious never-fly jobs program.    But we
digress…

 

One last point of comparison,
on the fundamental need to shut down NASA in-house space transport development
in favor of procuring transportation on a commercial basis outside of the
utterly dysfunctional NASA rocket bureaucracy: 
Ares 1/Orion were up to $49 billion projected cost to 2019 first flight
when they were cancelled.  SpaceX recently stated that their total cost for Falcon
9/Dragon development (actual first flight, 2010) has been $600 million so
far.  That’s more than an 80 to 1 cost
ratio, for considerably less than a 2 to 1 vehicle capability ratio.

 

          The FY’12 Budget, White House Proposal

 

The White House FY’12 budget
has a top-level problem: It freezes overall Federal spending at 2010 levels, at
a time when the House has made it clear that it wants to cut back to 2008
levels.  There is immense political
pressure to reduce rather than merely freeze Federal spending.  This is likely to lead to a major political
confrontation, with somewhat unpredictable results.  (NASA FY’08 funding was $17.4 billion, 7%
less than FY’10’s $18.7 billion, for what it’s worth.)

 

NASA still enjoys
considerable public good will, and is less vulnerable to cuts than many parts
of the government – this is reflected in the House FY’11 CR which trims NASA
only 1.5% from FY’10 levels.  We see it
as possible that overall NASA funding levels for FY’12 will survive this year’s
budget process relatively unscathed – cut, very likely, but by less than the 7%
that would take NASA back to FY’08 levels – but there are no guarantees.

 

However, as with the FY’11
CR, we see it as near certain that there will be attempts in the Congress to
mandate much larger slices of the available pie for SLS and MPCV, raiding other
NASA accounts to feed what is in essence an earmarked porkbarrel
megaproject. 
We can (if we must) live with SLS/MPCV as a never-fly jobs program, as
long as it’s funding-capped and never allowed to pretend that grabbing just a
few billion more from the rest of NASA would make any real difference in the
outcome.  Far better though would be to
scale SLS back to a smaller ongoing heavy-lift research program to preserve the
core NASA rocket-development talent, while redirecting MPCV to develop a
capsule that can ride on available commercial launchers.  (Politics may be the art of the possible, but
one should never totally forget the ideal.)

 

The good news is that the
White House FY’12 budget does cap SLS/MPCV funding, albeit at a higher level
than we’d like – about $1.7 billion per year for SLS, and about $900 million
per year for MPCV, about $2.6 billion combined total in FY’12 and for the next
several years.  This essentially
maintains the FY’11 level these programs were started at by the s.3729 FY’11
NASA Authorization, rather than increasing funding significantly in FY’12 and
onward as called for in s.3729.  It looks
to us as if both the White House and NASA HQ are trying to gently steer SLS
away from being Ares 5 in drag, and toward a more generic program aimed at
figuring out what heavy-lift capability NASA actually needs and how to obtain
that capability affordably.

 

We doubt the Congressional
Ares/Orion mega-earmark lobby will accept this course change quietly.  We expect continued attempts to both grab
funding from, and place roadblocks in front of, programs seen as rivals to continued
in-house NASA space transport development – very obviously, Commercial Crew
& Cargo (decently funded at just under $800 million in the FY’12 request)
and more subtly, Orbital Propellant Depots work.   Propellant Depots have potential to greatly
reduce (or even eliminate) the need for a really large new booster, reducing
future exploration costs in the process. 
(Much more about Depots at our upcoming conference, Space Access ’11,
April 7-9 in Phoenix Arizona, details at http://www.space-access.org.)

 

          What Comes Next

 

We expect a series of sharp
tactical fights in the coming months. 
Part of winning those fights is preparing the battlefield by educating
Congress and the public about the issues. 
For the self-starter solo activists out there, we encourage your
individual initiatives, but there are also some group-organized volunteer DC
lobbying efforts coming up soon that are worth mentioning:

 

– Space Frontier Foundation’s
“Keep The Promise” event, March 6-8, run by people we work with
regularly, and focusing pretty directly on the issues we’ve discussed here.

http://promise.spacefrontier.org/

 

ProSpace’s
“March Storm”, March 13-15, announced as focusing primarily on
“Zero-G, Zero Tax” but also mentioning support for NASA Commercial
Crew & Cargo.  Far be it from us to
suggest the possibility of getting involved with this effort then working to
influence the focus in favor of the issues you consider most timely…

http://www.prospace.org/announcements/marchstorm2011announced

 

And then there’s

 

 – National Space Society/Space Exploration
Alliance’s “Legislative Blitz”, February 27 – March 1.  The main NSS webpage currently describes the
Blitz agenda as “In September 2010, Congress passed the NASA Authorization
Act of 2010. [AKA s.3729 – ed.] It is now time for Congress to enact
legislation that appropriates the required funding in compliance with the
Authorization Act.”  We’d advise
caution before getting involved with this effort, since taken literally, that’s
a call to increase SLS/MPCV funding at the expense of other NASA exploration
work, as outlined in s.3729.  We wouldn’t
be totally surprised if that’s indeed what these groups are pushing for, given
their histories.  We’d advise checking
carefully first before committing here.

 

There’s also an AIAA
“Congressional Visits Day” effort March 15-16 that seems to be
generically in favor of aerospace technology work.  It’s not clear how much latitude they’ll want
to give you to set your own agenda for your visits, but as the old saying goes,
it’s often easier to ask forgiveness than permission.  This could be worthwhile if you’re an AIAA
member – again though, we’d advise you to find out more before committing.

http://www.aiaa.org/content.cfm?pageid=129

 

Happy citizen lobbying!

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Space Access Society’s sole
purpose is to promote radical reductions in the cost of reaching space. 
You may redistribute this Update in any medium you choose, as long as you do it
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Space Access Society

http://www.space-access.org

[email protected]

“Reach low orbit and you’re halfway to anywhere in the Solar System”
                             
– Robert A. Heinlein, as related by G Harry Stine

 


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