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    Big NASA Budget Cuts to Slash Mars Missions, Experts Say

    NASA's budget for the next fiscal year is likely to include deep cuts to planetary science programs, forcing the space agency to withdraw altogether from an international effort to send two new missions to Mars, experts say.

    President Barack Obama is slated to submit his administration's federal budget request for fiscal year 2013 on Monday (Feb. 13), and NASA will hold a series of briefings to discuss its share on the same day. While exactly how much money is allocated to NASA is unknown, insiders expect a significant reduction in the portion slotted for robotic exploration of Mars and other solar system bodies.

    The cuts probably will compel NASA to bow out of the European Space Agency-led ExoMars missions, which aim to launch an orbiter and a drill-toting rover to the Red Planet in 2016 and 2018, respectively, says one space policy expert.

    "NASA has, I think, already told ESA it's not going to be able to provide a launch vehicle in 2016," said John Logsdon, professor emeritus at George Washington University. "So that is going to cause a big international uproar on one dimension. And the planetary community in the U.S. is going to be very unhappy about the fact that there's no money for major new planetary missions." [NASA's 10 Greatest Science Missions]

    A 20 percent cut?

    Logsdon said he expects NASA's overall budget for fiscal 2013 — which runs from Oct. 1, 2012, to Sept. 30, 2013 — will be roughly similar to the agency's funding for the current year. NASA received $17.8 billion in the current fiscal year, or about 0.5 percent of the federal budget.

    However, the scuttlebutt in the space science community suggests NASA's planetary science program will suffer serious cuts, Logsdon added. The journal Science's ScienceInsider publication reported Thursday (Feb. 9) that Obama's budget request will allocate $1.2 billion to the program, compared with the $1.5 billion that planetary science received in fiscal year 2012.

    The 20 percent cut would make it tougher for the space agency to tackle ambitious exploration projects, including ExoMars. This state of affairs helped persuade Ed Weiler to tender his resignation as chief of NASA's science mission directorate last September, ScienceInsider reported.

    "The Mars program is one of the crown jewels of NASA," Weiler told ScienceInsider. "In what irrational Homer Simpson world would we single it out for disproportionate cuts?"

    Logsdon and other experts say planetary science is probably being slashed in part to help pay for the James Webb Space Telescope. That muscular successor to NASA's Hubble Space Telescope has suffered repeated delays and cost overruns over the years.

    The huge instrument is now slated to cost $8.8 billion and launch in 2018 at the earliest.

    "Finishing Webb is being given a higher priority than starting or committing to new Mars missions," Logsdon told SPACE.com.

    ExoMars without NASA

    As it currently stands, ExoMars would launch the methane-sniffing Trace Gas Orbiter toward the Red Planet in 2016 and a robotic rover two years later.

    The rover would carry a sizable drill, allowing it to sample subterranean soils — an environment more likely than the frigid, radiation-bombarded surface to harbor evidence of life if Mars ever hosted any, many scientists believe. [7 Biggest Mysteries of Mars]

    NASA is slated to provide the rockets for both ExoMars launches, as well as a variety of instrumentation for the orbiter and the rover. The U.S. space agency also is supposed to contribute the landing system for the rover's descent to the Martian surface.

    But NASA probably will have to pull out of the ExoMars effort now.

    "Frankly, I think there's no doubt about that," Logsdon said.

    In fact, ESA has already begun talking to Russia about picking up the slack, according to media reports. Russia's Proton rocket could send the ExoMars orbiter and rover on their way toward the Red Planet, experts say.

    Human spaceflight may fare better

    Not all NASA programs will suffer as badly as planetary science in next year's budget. For example, commercial crew development — NASA's effort to encourage private spaceflight companies to start ferrying astronauts to low-Earth orbit and back — appears poised for a bump.

    This week, NASA announced that it is planning to award up to $500 million to each of two spaceflight companies over the next two years to help them complete their vehicle designs.

    "Since they only have $400 million this year, that means they have to be counting on a pretty substantial allocation for next year," Logsdon said.

    Such budget increases, however, are likely be few and far between. As the federal government tries to cut costs across the board during these tough economic times, it's easy to imagine many NASA employees trying to ward off disappointment by lowering their expectations.

    "If they maintain parity — if they're just not cut too much — that may be enough in the current environment for most organizations," Roger Launius, space history curator at the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, told SPACE.com. "And I suspect that there are many people at NASA that will count it a victory if the overall NASA budget for FY 2013 is comparable to the budget this year and last year."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

     
    • StompK  •  La Junta, Colorado  •  2 mths ago
      Well, it's about time. The money can be spent much wiser on Earth, as long as it doesn't go to the war mongers.
      • Erin 1 mth 11 days ago
        We gained the MRI,CT Scan,Pace Maker,Fiber Optics,Agricultural spinoffs resulting in feeding the world,Ultra Sound,ETC...... from investing into the Moon Landing in the 1960's and countless lives have been saved as a direct result.Mankind has the Internet and larger Computers and the list goes on to the tune of a return in TRILLIONS and counting.You must be aware of some of these gains from these types of endeavors. There 's a huge push to dumb people down to this stuff and you shouldn't continue advocating against the human process of creativity whereby mankind has gained trillions more in profits than we would have without this program.larouchepaccom
    • Entropy  •  Carson City, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      Big oil gets 4billion dollars a year in subsidies, by their own reports. They made record profits over the last 10 years. Can't we allocate some of that money and give it to Mars exploration?
      • Entropy 3 mths ago
        Even if we only took 20% away that amounts to $800,000,000. That would fund NASA and a mission mars every year. We'd lick this space thing in no time.
      • Adam 3 mths ago
        it's disheartening that the general concensus anymore is to deride space exploration. this is not the correct behavior from a properly functioning human. smartphones as a constant distraction & ensuring that white capitalist protestant men are always stay on top of the heap is the priority now. shameful
      • Adam 3 mths ago
        sorry for the grammar mistake & typo
    • jake  •  Wallingford, Pennsylvania  •  3 mths ago
      The space race was never more important to our nation than it is now.We need it desperately.The discoveries that lie within reach must be made by us.And not by others.If they are not,We as a nation will pay far more dearly for this mans lack of vision and foresight that the mere money that he is cutting from NASA in the Budget.It is inconceivable to me that an entire nation cannot see this,It was made quite plain to anyone old enough to remember Mercury Seven of all the advances in technology and technocracy that followed.Our very existence may depend not on just our participation but a leading role in Mars exploration.We cannot return to office one with such a lack of vision.One who squanders precious resources on failed attempts to socialize our nation.One who wastes money on projects and countries that only act as a millstone around our nations financial neck, and eventually drag us all down together.
    • Skunkchump  •  Death Valley, California  •  3 mths ago
      Bill Nye said. “If this budget is allowed to stand, the United States will walk away from decades of greatness in space science and exploration. But it will lose more than that. The U.S. will lose expertise, capability, and talent. The nation will lose the ability to compete in one of the few areas in which it is still the undisputed number one.”
    • Epicurean  •  3 mths ago
      Now if the planet was known to have gold or oil, they would double the funding.
      • Panama Joe 3 mths ago
        If Exxon owned the sun, we'd have had solar power decades ago! - Al Gore.
      • EricG 3 mths ago
        Well if the planet had oil and gold, it would be a good idea to fund this lol.
    • Kevin  •  3 mths ago
      Just wondering if people actually realize how much technology we have that we use in our every day life that has developed or even came directly from NASA? A lot. The exploration of space is about more things than just observing rocks. The innovations and knowledge gained by observing the universe is overwhelming. I don't expect many people to understand that, as many people don't know jack about how things are created and even dreamed-up, but the technology people are using and the wonders to come are not merely falling out of the sky, they're being reached for. So before anyone so quickly dismisses minute amount of money spent on sciences, maybe some research of their own will go a long way to enlighten what the general public so ignorantly believes is a waste of money.
      • Sage 3 mths ago
        Kevin you are correct, NASA has progressed our everyday lives by experimenting and funding various projects other thought hopeless. NASA would prove us wrong again.
    • Conservative Liberal, Lib ...  •  Los Angeles, California  •  3 mths ago
      Funding NASA vs funding war in the Middle East. You fund the wars with your taxes, and I'll fund NASA with mine, and in 20 years let's compare who profited more from our investment.
    • Tamlane  •  3 mths ago
      Americans sure LOVE to complain about how expensive NASA is. Yet, in 10 years from now when the Chinese are world leaders in science and technology and sending their own to the Moon, Americans will complain about how NASA should have done more.
    • nighthawk  •  Hazen, North Dakota  •  3 mths ago
      What in the hell every happened to this country? We used to be a nation of creators and innovators. We were dreamers who became doers. Now we whine, whine about this, about that, about most anything you can imagine. Being an American used to be something to be proud of....now it almost seems like it is something we feel we have to make excuses for. This NASA cut is just another example of how this country has declined over the last 4 decades. Now our kids are stupid, but then what do we need with smart kids as they all carry "smart phones" and can get any answer you want, so why burden them with the ideas that they maybe should actually know something on their own without having to download an app for it? I could go on and on....but it just gets to depressing to write it all down. Good night everyone.
    • Kyle  •  3 mths ago
      I'd rather we fund this than those stupids wars in the Middle East.
    • haha  •  Austin, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      Don't forget that BHO wanted NASA to reach out to muslims.
    • bpasq2000  •  Woburn, Massachusetts  •  3 mths ago
      Do you realize the U.S landed on the moon in 1969....a full 43 years ago, and STILL no nation has duplicated that feat and there's a reason. The Chinese, Russians and Indians may look busy and innovative, but they're essentially where we were in the early 60's Gemini stage. Basically tin cans with a guy in them shot into space. Without U.S technology the others are likely decades away from orbiting and returning from the moon, much less landing and returning from it. Meanwhile, the U.S should embark on a first-class exploration of the oceans instead.......a lot closer, less explored than near space and we KNOW there's some weird things out there.
    • Joe  •  3 mths ago
      Cutting "anything" to do with space exploration is massively short-sighted and stupid. You will not solve "one" problem on Earth by diverting even one-hundred million dollars on space exploration. The sorry state of human affairs will never, ever change - killing, raping, starvation, wars, more wars, lies, filthy political intrigue, pollution, greed, boundless greed, ignorance, religious tyranny.... If there's one thing we can be proud of amidst all the mindless #$%$ we wallow in down here on Earth, it's science and all the artistry, imagination, and vision that make it a high point of human achievement.
    • JohnDoe  •  3 mths ago
      Democrats, Republicans. There is no difference anymore.
      All of the politicians have ruined this country. They will destroy the U.S. just to make a buck.
    • SC  •  3 mths ago
      When you go to the Johnson Space Center, NASA will tell you the only President NOT to visit it facilities, is Barack H. Obama. Just saying.
    • RLB  •  3 mths ago
      I still do not understand why we have not gone back to the moon. We should have a base or bases there by now.
    • JL  •  Pelion, South Carolina  •  3 mths ago
      Could we get NASA on the list where you donate to it at tax time?
    • Willy  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 mths ago
      Here's an idea, stop sending billions of dollars to countries that hate us so we can fund our space program.
    • Persian  •  3 mths ago
      I am all for Mission To Mars if they transport some of our Politicians to Mars for good.
    • Del  •  3 mths ago
      Everything NASA has done has had a HUGE impact on our daily lives. It is impossible to overstate the importance of continuing funding to scientific research regardless of whatever happens, because in the long run, it is technological innovation that is going to ensure economic progress and stability, rather than budget cuts to science that will cripple the economy in the long run.
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