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    NASA Seeks Private Space Taxi Designs for Astronaut Flights

    WASHINGTON — NASA intends to provide $300 million to $500 million each to at least two companies over 21 months starting in August to complete designs of vehicles capable of delivering crews to and from the International Space Station.

    The selected companies also will be asked to develop plans for certifying their vehicles to carry astronauts, NASA officials said. Contractors also would be responsible for designing optional milestones into their proposals for additional precertification work after the initial 21-month period.

    NASA officials said plans to select at least two prospective providers for the third round of the agency’s Commercial Crew Program is contingent upon funding. Lawmakers provided $406 million for the effort in 2012, less than half of what the agency requested.

    Ed Mango, NASA’s Commercial Crew Program manager, said the agency hopes an initial crewed demonstration flight to low Earth orbit will take place in the latter half of this decade, with regular commercially operated flights to the International Space Station beginning around 2017. However, the date could slip, depending on funding in future years, he said.

    Mango spoke at an industry forum at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida Feb. 7, just hours before the agency released the formal solicitation for the Commercial Crew integrated Capability (CCiCap) procurement. Proposals are due March 23 for CCiCap, which is the third and final funded phase of NASA’s effort to nurture development of a commercial crew transportation system. [Top 10 Fantasy Spaceships Headed for Reality]

    There will be a pre-proposal meeting at Kennedy Feb. 14 for prospective providers, but no one-on-one meetings with NASA officials are planned, according to the solicitation.

    NASA will fund CCiCap using Space Act agreements, which are not subject to the Federal Acquisition Regulations (FAR) that apply to traditional government contracts. Winners will develop an integrated system featuring a crew vehicle and launch vehicle, with work to be completed May 31, 2014.

    NASA would then certify its chosen systems to carry astronauts. That work will be done under FAR-based contracts, as NASA says Space Act agreements do not give the agency the legal authority to perform this certification, or to dictate design requirements needed for certification. Prospective providers must have their vehicles certified by NASA before they can fly astronauts.

    NASA's Commercial Crew Program office has not determined exactly how it will perform the certification work under the FAR contracts, but expects to present its strategy for agency approval in "late spring or early summer," Mango said.

    Certification work could begin as soon as June 2014, Mango said, depending on funding availability. "We don’t know when we’re going to get the funding to do that NASA certification," he said.

    To ensure that work toward certification can continue after May 31, 2014, the CCiCap Space Act agreements will include optional milestone periods that could run as long as two years and provide each company with about $400 million in additional financial assistance.

    "If we have multiple partners throughout the [Space Act agreement] process, we think the most we might be able to give them is something along the lines of $400 million per partner" for the optional milestones, Mango said.

    It remains uncertain, however, whether NASA will have the funding to support multiple commercial crew providers.

    "We plan to maintain multiple providers as long as it makes sense technically and financially," Phil McAlister, director of commercial spaceflight development at NASA headquarters in Washington, said via email Feb. 7. "In the end, we have committed to having one or more crew transportation providers."

    NASA previously planned to fund the third phase of the Commercial Crew Program under traditional FAR-type contracts, but funding constraints coupled with the desire to support multiple providers prompted the agency to switch to Space Act agreements. These kinds of agreements, used in the first two phases of the program, provide more flexibility than standard government contracts but cannot be used to buy hardware or services.

    Currently NASA is reliant on Russian Soyuz vehicles to deliver crews to the station, at a cost of $63 million per seat.

    Four companies are currently developing crew-carrying vehicles under funded Space Act agreements with NASA: Boeing Space Exploration of Houston; Blue Origin of Kent, Wash.; Sierra Nevada Space Systems of Louisville, Colo.; and Space Exploration Technologies Corp. of Hawthorne, Calif.

    Every aspiring provider of commercial crew transportation services but one plans to use a human-rated version of United Launch Alliance’s Atlas 5 expendable rocket to reach orbit. Space Exploration Technologies plans to use its Falcon 9 rocket.

    This article was provided by Space News, dedicated to covering all aspects of the space industry.

     

    11 comments

    • Devin  •  3 mths ago
      Opening space exploration development to the private sector is the best thing they could do. Competition breeds ingenuity - and will save a lot of money as people fight for contracts.
    • Z  •  3 mths ago
      They should go back to the Apollo/Saturn V combo. One hell of a PROVEN spacecraft and the only launch vehicle with a perfect launch record(yes a few engins cut out early but nothing they couldn't compensate for in flight) and think of the lift capacity, more than the shuttle ever thought of.
    • THE BANISHED  •  3 mths ago
      "Hello! I am Johnnycab...where can I take you ???"
    • Kenneth  •  3 mths ago
      @grim Reaper those billions are spent here on earth to pay for the development and building of those spacecraft meaning people have jobs
    • NewMexicoGent  •  3 mths ago
      Kiss this money goodbye! Every time we pay up-front, it's a financial disaster.
      • yadigg 3 mths ago
        I know right, who remembers 2 years ago when NASA tried to take water to the moon, it must of been a fail because I didn't hear anything after that and it must of cost billions. and they blame the poor for the debt problems.
    • WATCHEM  •  San Diego, California  •  3 mths ago
      NASA is now coming to Burt Rutan for space vehicles. The government was too big to think efficient. They say an elephant is really a mouse built to OSHA standards.
      • YIKES! 3 mths ago
        John Denver is spinning in his grave!
    • Grim Reaper  •  3 mths ago
      Why shoot billions up into space when it's so desperately needed on the ground?
      • Locke 3 mths ago
        "Why shoot billions up into space when it's so desperately needed on the ground?"
        How much do you think we're spending in space?

        Go ahead, take a guess. How many cents per tax dollar goes into NASA?
    • Joshua  •  3 mths ago
      "Currently NASA is reliant on Russian Soyuz vehicles to deliver crews to the station, at a cost of $63 million per seat."

      I hope bags fly free!
    • Jose  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 mths ago
      This administration is nuts.
    • Realist  •  3 mths ago
      it's ALL part of President Newt's plan...deal with it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    • yadigg  •  Richmond, Virginia  •  3 mths ago
      Americans in the field of profession just don't take themselves seriously, too many sci-fi movies or whatever you call them.
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