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    Space shuttle's legacy: Soaring in orbit and costs

    CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — The space shuttle was sold to America as cheap, safe and reliable. It was none of those.

    It cost $196 billion over 40 years, ended the lives of 14 astronauts and managed to make less than half the flights promised.

    Yet despite all that, there were some big achievements that weren't promised: major scientific advances, stunning photos of the cosmos, a high-flying vehicle of diplomacy that helped bring Cold War enemies closer, and something to brag about.

    Former President George H.W. Bush, who oversaw the early flights, said the shuttle program "authored a truly inspiring chapter in the history of human exploration."

    NASA's first space shuttle flight was in April 1981. The 135th and final launch is set for Friday, although storms could cause a delay. Once Atlantis lands at the end of a 12-day mission, it and the other two remaining shuttles are officially museum pieces — more expensive than any paintings.

    America has done far more for far less. The total price tag for the program was more than twice the $90 billion NASA originally calculated.

    The nation spent more on the space shuttle than the combined cost of soaring to the moon, creating the atom bomb, and digging the Panama Canal, according to an analysis by The Associated Press using figures from NASA and the Smithsonian Institution and adjusting for inflation.

    Even its most ardent supporters concede that the shuttle program never lived up to its initial promise. The selling point when it was conceived four decades ago was that with weekly launches, getting into space would be relatively inexpensive and safe. That wasn't the case.

    "But there is no embarrassment in setting the bar impossibly high and then failing to clear it," said former astronaut Duane Carey, who flew in 2002. "What matters is that we strived mightily to do so — and we did strive mightily. The main legacy left by the shuttle program is that of a magnificent failure."

    Of the five shuttles built, two were lost in fiery tragedies. The most shuttle flights taken in one year was nine — far from the promised 50.

    The program also managed to make blasting into space seem everyday dull by going to the same place over and over again. Shuttles circled the planet 20,830 times, but went nowhere really new.

    The shuttle's epitaph is "we tried," said Hans Mark, a former deputy NASA administrator who oversaw most of the first dozen launches.

    Six years ago, then-NASA chief Michael Griffin even called the shuttle program a mistake.

    But as a mistake it is one that paid off in wildly unexpected ways that weren't about money and reliability.

    "The discoveries it enabled, the international cooperation it fostered and the knowledge it gained — often at great human cost — has also contributed in countless, important ways to humanity and our common progress," President Bush wrote The Associated Press in an email. Bush oversaw the program's early days as vice president, a job that has by tradition supervised NASA.

    There are the magnificent photos from the Hubble Space Telescope, which helped pinpoint the age of the universe and demonstrated the existence of mysterious dark energy; the ongoing labwork on the International Space Station; a multitude of satellites for everything from spying to climate change; and spacecraft that explore the solar system. All owe their existence to the space shuttle.

    The Hubble was not just launched from the shuttle — it was repaired and upgraded five times by shuttle astronauts. They also captured and fixed satellites in orbit.

    Earlier this year, shuttle astronauts installed a $2 billion particle physics experiment on the space station that may find evidence of dark matter and better explain aspects of how the universe was formed. Add the intangibles of near continuous American presence in space over three decades and a high-flying venue for both international diplomacy and school science lessons.

    Like a real life version of the television show "Star Trek," the shuttle was a United Nations in space, carrying representatives of 16 other countries. The U.S. and Russia became close partners in space and Russian rocket scientists after the breakup of the Soviet Union found new employment. NASA's current boss said all that is not something that should be ignored. The shuttle also diversified space to make it seem more like Earth, sending the first American woman, the first African-American and teachers, lawmakers and even a former migrant farmworker into orbit.

    "The space shuttle program reaffirmed, once again, American dominance in space and laid the foundation for the United States to continue its long-standing leadership beyond our home planet," NASA Administrator and former shuttle commander Charles Bolden wrote in an email. "The shuttle program evolved over its lifetime and gave us many firsts and many proud national moments, along with painful lessons."

    University of Colorado science policy professor Roger Pielke Jr., who studies shuttle costs and policies, said there are probably other ways the country could have spent several billion dollars a year on a human space program and gotten more.

    Launching like a rocket and landing like an airplane, the shuttle was the ultimate hybrid. It acts both as a space taxi, carrying astronauts, and has the muscle of a long-distance trucker, hauling heavy machinery. That versatility translated into higher costs.

    When spaceships carry people, extra safety requirements add hefty expenses. Rockets that haul big pieces of equipment — like station segments or a giant telescope — require more power and fuel, which means more cost. The shuttle has both of those problems that escalate the price.

    When the shuttle succeeded, it did so in a spectacular way. But its failures were also large and tragic.

    Seven astronauts perished when Challenger exploded about a minute after launch in 1986 and seven more died when Columbia burned up as it returned to Earth in 2003. One out of every 67 flights ended in death — a fatality rate that would make the most ardent daredevil cringe.

    Based on deaths per million miles traveled, the space shuttle is 138 times riskier than a passenger jet.

    Former astronaut and past NASA associate administrator Scott Horowitz said, "While the shuttle is the most magnificent engineering feat, its complexity and the naïve belief that it would be as safe as an airliner was its Achilles heel."

    One problem is that the shuttle was a compromise from start to finish, said Howard McCurdy, a professor at American University and author of several books on the space agency. The shuttle had to satisfy both NASA and the Department of Defense, which dictated the exact shape of its wings and the size of its payload bay, said Roger Launius, senior curator at the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum.

    The concept behind it was based on a three-step space plan, ultimately ending on Mars, said George Mueller, the former top official who is credited as the father of the space shuttle program. To get to Mars, NASA needed a space station circling Earth as a jumping-off point. To get to the space station, NASA wanted a completely reusable space shuttle.

    In 1971, President Nixon gave NASA only the shuttle. It had no place to go. The space station wasn't built until 1998.

    Worst of all, Mueller said, was that the plan to make every part of the shuttle fully reusable was dropped. Budget cuts ordered by the Nixon White House meant that the fuel tank would be jettisoned with each flight and the boosters would fall into the ocean after launch and have to be retrieved and refurbished extensively.

    Those changes made to save upfront money, while they sound small, meant adding incredible expense to every flight, Mueller said in an interview.

    The shuttle will likely go down in history as an anomaly of America's space program. The spacecraft before it were disposable capsules, like Apollo. And the designs for machines of the near future are also for the most part disposable capsules. That suggests that the 30 years of reusable shuttles that landed like airplanes were a diversion from the natural evolution of rocketry, said McCurdy.

    It may be an anomaly, but astronauts call it an engineering marvel in both versatility and complexity. John Glenn, who flew in a Mercury capsule as well as the shuttle, called it "the perfect vehicle for its time."

    He said like any pilot he'd prefer to fly the shuttle and called it a much smoother ride. But he said he understands why the future looks more like his Mercury capsules.

    "As far as expense, simplification and cutting costs, the capsule is by far cheaper," the 89-year-old former senator said in a telephone interview from his Columbus, Ohio, office on Friday.

    "The shuttle is an amazing piece of machinery," astronaut Stan Love said. "It blows away anything that can fly now or in the next 30 years."

    However, when it comes to fulfilling the promise made four decades ago, Love retells a joke heard often around NASA: The space shuttle was supposed to be cheap, safe and turn spaceflight into something so routine it would be boring. One out of three ain't bad.

     

    740 comments

    • GainaA  •  9 mths ago
      I agree with people which estimate the Space Shuttle program as a very good achievement of the people of USA, in spite of some losts. It was not so expensive and very productive. It is much better than any War, it made closer the former rivals (USA and USSR). I think that the initiation of the new program of deep space investigation would be useful for the whole World if the International cooperation will continue, say with Europe, Russia, or China. Best wishes to NASA Space programs!
    • Racindavid  •  10 mths ago
      We spend more in 20 days running this country than THE ENTIRE 30 YEAR PROGRAM COST.This article makes NO ATTEMPT to quantify the benefits of the shuttle. It is a FANTASTIC feat of engineering, marveled by the rest of the world, and WILL go down in history as one of man-kinds crown jewels....You can spend my tax dollars on NASA any day rather than $%%$$#$$ it away on social programs that do nothing but create MORE dependent losers looking for another handout....
    • Kevin  •  10 mths ago
      When did anything cost what they said it would cost - never. Space will never be cheap. It is true that the shuttle is not the most efficient payload launcher but the Shuttle did many things that could not have been done with capsules. One of the reasons the shuttle turned out to be so expensive was it's lack of use due to NASA's paranoia - controlled by tort fearing politicians rather than true explorers. If this attitude had existed 200 years ago the west would never have been settled - "oh my gosh, indians, starvation, disease, lawlessness, it's dangerous - we can't do that, somebody might get hurt!! Our Government was not created to be our mother and prevent us from stubbing our toe, it was created for greatness and sadly that is vaporizing. We are moving backward instead of forward - first we went to the moon, then just to orbit and now we are stuck on the ground - how embarassing. We are like the agoraphobic who is to affraid to go out into the world and too apatheic to care, how pathetic and decadent - oh yes, this is only one evidence of our slippery slope to decadence and oblivion. We need to wake up and take back our freedom and our adventurousness before it is too late (maybe to late already).
    • SEAN  •  10 mths ago
      ya wow thats capital hill for ya very stupid i mean come on they are just focus on the money who cares about the money we can honestly say the if that if they never would have started something like that then we would have never gone to the moon, space , and hell we have created alot of things on the way from where we were 196 billion dollars.... not bad at all in forty years and got alot of inventions out of it like sunglasses, computers now thats a big one the changed the face of earth and how we do things. i mean just think what would the world be like if the nasa program didnt exist. hell if they just keep it going then theres more jobs availble and that so important to everyone... Cause dreams and inspiration dont have a price tag and for all the men and women who lost there lives committing to that dream are now being looked downed upon and overlooked as a casutly. we all know that they would have been proud to see are progress to the stars but now its just a dream that was failure to launch.
    • JamieS  •  10 mths ago
      This hurts, I have no words.
      • Nobama 10 mths ago
        you used words to say that.... just sayin'
      • Deepsix 10 mths ago
        Obama is too concerned about confiscation & redistribtion to his entitled classes. We need a bigger safety hammock he says. The country is going by the way of Detroit - broken down & abandoned.
    • will  •  10 mths ago
      "Mans grasp should be beyond his reach otherwise what is heaven for" My uncle was one of the origional engineers of the shuttle I have always been proud of the accomplishments of the men and women at NASA to call their work a failure is a slap to the face of those who dared to dream and make the fantasy a reality! shame on the journalists who wrote this article!
      • We the people 10 mths ago
        I believe it's "Man's reach should far exceed his grasp, or what are the heavens for?"
    • Peter H  •  10 mths ago
      $196billion over 40 years. Lets put that into perspective, we've spent around $2Trillion in less than 10 years in Iraq and Afghanistan - what has it gained us? We spent $700bil (way more, actually) in under a year bailing out the banks - what great discoveries has that gained us?
      • Karmalious 10 mths ago
        too true.
      • Dale U 10 mths ago
        We've discovered that big banks are crooks - Oh wait - we already knew that !!!
      • illustratumuna 10 mths ago
        Agreed
    • a yahoo user  •  10 mths ago
      Medicare fraud per year 60 billion. NASA cost per year 5 billion. Our politicians are losers.
      • Taxed 10 mths ago
        Why is fraud ignored. The bo's contribution to a solution.
      • Taxed 10 mths ago
        Fraud dominates budget waste. Hellllloooo
      • jake 10 mths ago
        NASA cost per year 20 billion
    • Nobama  •  10 mths ago
      GO NASA!
      • Doubter 10 mths ago
        Too late. It already went, when funding was eliminated six or eight years ago.
    • Glenn  •  10 mths ago
      14 shuttle astronauts gave their lives because of what they believed in. If they could talk, I doubt very seriously they and their families would say it was a failure. This was such negative journalism, obviously written by some one who has no conception of the human spirit or the great strides of the overall space program. ( The most fantastic feat of science, sacrifice, bravery and engineering ever conceived by any country ) It cost us billions and billions of dollars yes, but if you want to talk about a waste, lets more strongly consider Mr. O and his on going wars that were supposed to be finished a long time ago. The audacity of great waste... B. O. !! The throw away of billions to countries that probably just hate us, and borrowing that we can never pay back ! The only good about the war is our incredibly courageous men and women that are engaged in it !!!
      As for the shuttle program, people lost ther lives because they had a big dream that is very risky. They wanted the country to share in that but unfortunately it did not happen as they planned. I feel for the families of those astronauts that may have read the comments and this writing by people that seem to hate what their loved ones cared so much about ! Obviously the 14 deaths were 14 too many and the cost was outrageous, but the shuttle was a success when you consider the great technological gains verses the great risk, uncertainty and making the impossible happen. A shame it is over, and now because of it's high cost and the bueracracy of this administration ( both inside NASA and the government) and the obahma spending, now we have no real plan to do something again that will be interesting and far more advantageous. With the right direction and a strong economy behind it, space exploration would have given us so much in technological gain, but that won't happen now because of greed in high goverment places and the mistakes of higher NASA authority that should have made better and more cost effecient decisions.
      My hat's off to all those hard working brilliant engineers, scientists, workers and to the great courage of all those astronauts / families. Live long and prosper to the spirit of man and the adventure of space exploration !! God bless the USA !
    • Lois  •  10 mths ago
      Yes! I totally agree that there were such a lot of expenses concerning launching the rockets; BUT if only expenses had been the only thing thought of during history of man, there would be no automobile, no railroads, no paved roads, electric, etc. Believe me! I am not some mindless fool; but at times things must be thought of one way or another.
    • jeditoyman  •  10 mths ago
      Loved the shuttle program I always felt like there was not enough being spent on the space program to advance science and technology even more but I guess the Nerds lose another one.
    • Aaron  •  10 mths ago
      They talk as if the 196 billion over 40 years was a waste, but no one brings up that the military spends that in just over 3 months...
    • billeo  •  10 mths ago
      Any one who can put the words failure and shuttle in the same sentence or article must be from another planet!

      One of the very best things that has happened in my life time is the shuttle program.

      Yes, in HINDsight there may have been better ways to do it; but not at the time of the launch of the program; and that is what makes all of the difference. Once committed, changing course is often not possible. The shuttle was worth ever penny and more.

      It was a brilliant success and I am grateful to all of the brave men and women who risked and those who sacrificed their lives to give us this marvel of our time.

      Thank You!
    • Prometheus  •  10 mths ago
      Wow! The entire run of the shuttle mission cost 1/12 of the amount that the Pentagon lost track of in the year 2000. Sounds pretty cheap to me, for what we got. What did we get in return for the missing military spending?
    • Michael  •  10 mths ago
      I remember when the Shuttle started they said an accident every 50 launches was expected, so 1 in 67 seems to be a slight improvement.
    • Celtic  •  10 mths ago
      I work there Yahoo..you tool. It may not have been cheap, but what the hell is any more ? As far as safe and reliable...Umm, you may not have noticed but we're not making widgets here at the Space Center. This incredible craft, which numerous countries have tried unsuccessfully to mimic, hurtles into space at speeds in excess of 17,000 mph. We have had over 150 flights and two disasters. They are sad and a great burden, but we launch people into space...it will NEVER be a perfect science. Stop acting like launching a shuttle is like taking the family to Yosemite and learn to appreciate the greatness of America on display. Without the shuttle, there is no space station, no hubble, and on and on...

      ace Centerace
    • SciFiusedtobegood  •  10 mths ago
      $200 billion over 40 years is around $5 billion a year. I'll take that any day over useless bailout and stimulus spending.
    • Burqababe  •  10 mths ago
      What a crappy article. What kind of reporter would dump on the best space program ever devised by man. When you are dealing with the kind of unknowns that this program dealt with, there were many risks....but nothing great is ever accomplished without taking risks.

      Seth...you should be ashamed of yourself!!!!!
    • Turnitupsidedown  •  10 mths ago
      Where is the Shuttle Replacement? This would have created more jobs than the 25 billion spent to create 2500 good paying jobs in auto industry for cars no one wants to buy!
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