Historic SpaceX launch delayed till Saturday because of weather

The historic launch of the SpaceX Crew Dragon to the International Space Station was scrubbed Wednesday about 17 minutes before the scheduled liftoff due to weather.

The mission — now rescheduled for 3:22 p.m. Eastern on Saturday if weather permits — was set to mark the first time a commercially owned spacecraft has carried people to orbit and restore the United States’ capacity to send humans to space after nearly a decade of relying on Russia.

President Donald Trump, who was on hand for the launch at Florida's Cape Canaveral, considers the mission a major step in revitalizing the space program and ushering in a new era for more routine trips not only for NASA but private entrepreneurs and eventually even average citizens.

He has also set an ambitious goal of returning humans to the moon by 2024, reforming federal regulations to help unleash a new space economy, and establishing the U.S. Space Force, a new military branch dedicated to space.

The Commercial Crew program, a unique public-private partnership, officially began in the Obama administration. But Trump has embraced it as his administration's first leap toward reclaiming American leadership in space and boosting private investment.

"Nobody else has grasped it the way this president has," said former Republican Rep. Robert Walker, a leading space consultant and lobbyist who has advised Trump on space policy. "This president has made it part of his legacy. This president has put an emphasis on it. He has now put money behind that emphasis and he has created an excitement about space again we haven't felt for a number of decades."

Veteran NASA astronauts Robert Behnken and Douglas Hurley were set to depart from Launch Complex 39A, the same site where the Apollo 11 astronauts lifted off on their way to the moon in 1969. If Saturday's liftoff is a success, then will then dock with the International Space Station and join fellow astronaut Chris Cassidy and Russian cosmonauts Anatoly Ivanishin and Ivan Vagner.

NASA and SpaceX took extra precautions due to the coronavirus pandemic. Behnken and Hurley were tested for Covid-19 and anyone in close contact with them was tested twice to ensure they don't bring the virus to the space station.

NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine has also repeatedly asked the public not to descend on Florida's space coast to avoid throngs of spectators on nearby beaches.

The agency limited the number of VIPs in attendance to control crowd size; lawmakers and administration officials are welcome, but staffers are not allowed.

SpaceX’s role is a major departure from the traditional way NASA has sent its astronauts into space.

In the past it funded, owned and operated its own rockets and shuttles. This time both the agency and the industry will fund the privately owned spacecraft, and NASA will buy rides aboard vehicles that also moonlight as transports-for-hire for a growing space economy.

The spacecraft has made 21 trips to the space station to deliver cargo, but has never ferried astronauts.

The launch, which will rely on SpaceX's reusable Falcon 9 rocket, will be a major milestone for ventures such as private space stations or human travel to the lunar surface.

"That opens up whole new horizons for the future," said Walker. "It means that as we achieve success in that arena we will have people flying who will not necessarily walk through NASA's front doors."

"This is just not about one launch," Nicole Mann, another Commercial Crew astronaut, said on Tuesday. "It is our first big step on our roadmap to the Moon for the Artemis mission."

Such partnerships between NASA and commercial companies are seen as a crucial way the agency, which is hustling to meet Trump’s demands for a moon landing in 2024, plans to stretch its dollars in the decades ahead.

Under the Commercial Crew program, NASA is also helping to finance the Boeing Starliner in the hope of creating competition and driving down the cost. Boeing's capsule failed to reach the International Space Station on a test flight last year without a crew and is scheduled to try again this summer before flying people onboard.

A successful launch will also end America’s reliance on the Russian space agency, which has been transporting U.S. astronauts to the International Space Station aboard its Soyuz spacecraft since 2011, when NASA retired the space shuttle program.

Once the Crew Dragon and Starliner are making regular flights to space, Bridenstine has said Russian and American astronauts could fly on both vehicles in a barter system in which the countries don’t exchange money.