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Mar 16th

Budget cuts end NASA’s plan to put astronauts back on moon

aldrinbuzz020410_optBY ROSANNE SKIRBLE
VOA NEWS

WASHINGTON, DC — The U.S. space agency's ambitious plan to put astronauts back on the moon has been cancelled in the Obama administration's proposed 2011 federal budget. The $3.6 trillion spending plan for the U.S. government was submitted to Congress on Feb. 1.

NASA's budget would actually increase by $6 billion over the next five years under the plan. But that amount falls far short of what it would need to support the estimated $81 billion Constellation program, aimed at returning astronauts to the moon by 2020. The costly program has been fraught with budget overruns and delayed by technical challenges with the design and testing of NASA's new Aeries 1 launch vehicle.

Cuts could boost private interest in public space agency

At a Feb. 1 news briefing, NASA administrator and former astronaut Charles Bolden said the new budget reflects a more sustainable and ambitious path to manned space exploration. He said NASA will focus on developing innovative space faring technologies and systems in partnership with the private sector. "We intend to blaze a new trail of discovery and development. We will facilitate the growth of new commercial industries and we will expand our understanding of the earth, our solar system and the universe beyond," Bolden says.

That would mean the private sector would take over getting astronauts into low-earth orbit. Responding to questions about whether the industry is up to the task, Britton Alexander, president of the Commercial Spaceflight Federation, says the private sector has a long and successful history with NASA. It's the same industry that has been doing it for NASA for the last 5 years," he says. "So it's really a change in how they contract for those services and vehicles," Alexander says. He adds that NASA will set the requirements and, "oversee vehicle safety and the process before putting astronauts on top."

A commitment to expand research conducted in space

Bolden confirmed that 2010 will see the final five U.S. space shuttle missions and he renewed his agency's commitment to more fully use the International Space Station. "We're going to address practical medical questions about astronaut bone density and the effects of radiation, how we can reach destinations sooner to mitigate the effects on space travelers of long journeys," he says. NASA will also support a broad array of biological, materials and combustion research aboard the space station.

Analysts unclear on proposed budget's impact on jobs

Critics of the planned changes are concerned that 4,600 of 15,000 jobs at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida will be cut with the end of the Space Shuttle Program. Alexander expects many of those highly trained workers to find new jobs in private industry. He notes that a $6 billion item in the proposed NASA budget would support commercial manned spacecraft development that could create as many as 5,000 jobs, about a third of which would be in Florida. That's based on a program about half the size of what is being proposed by the administration. It would also spur job growth in Colorado, Texas and California, he says, at the same time that the program to go back to the moon would not have been creating jobs.

Among the items that will get a boost in the NASA budget is earth science research, a new orbiting carbon observatory to replace the one lost on launch last year, and investment in a heavy-lift launcher. In all, the proposed 2011 budget will provide NASA with about $100 billion over the next five years to support these initiatives. But it remains to be seen whether the elimination of the moon program will pass muster in the U.S. Congress, which has the final say on federal spending priorities.

 
Comments (4)
4 Sunday, 21 February 2010 20:34
Tom Smith
$9 million have already been spent on developing Ares 1. the new rocket, and Orion the new lander. That money will essentially go to waste by ending the program, and there are countless unnecessary projects that obama is wasting money on right now. Constellation aims to establish a permanent base on the moon and is essentially the first step toward the colonization of mars and ultimately other planets. Because a mission to mars would require a stay of close to 1.5 years, I think we can agree that we cannot attempt a mission until we've had enough experience with a permanent base on the moon. With the cancellation of constellation, Obama will have single-handedly set back human advancement in space by DECADES. Somebody just lost my vote in 2012.
3 Friday, 05 February 2010 22:03
Kevin Smith
I witnessed the first moon landings as a child. I too would love to see America lead the way back to the moon. But as of right now no single nation, even the United States, can afford the costs. I think that as dissapointed as many of us feel about the budget cuts, we have to look at this in real terms. This delay will give us time to get smarter with a return to the moon program. And lets combine government, private industry and even other industrial nations in developing a realistic and attainable lunar program that can be afforded.

Keep in mind that NASA budgets have been cut in the past, and increased as well as other budgetary demands are reduced. We have good data from the Constellation project so far and that will be there when the money comes back to continue the program. Unfortunately the U.S. manned space program, for the better part of this current decade, is going to have to hitch a ride into low Earth orbit with other countries.
2 Friday, 05 February 2010 00:26
Mke Ziegenhagen
It's not Obama's fault that Bush spent us into bankruptcy with his unfinanced, off budget wars, while the rich received tax cuts.

I agree that NASA needs to return to the moon, but you can't escape global warming by fleeing to the moon or by burying your head in the ground.
1 Thursday, 04 February 2010 20:49
N9
Keep constellation!
Heck with obama!
I support the idea of increasing funding for privet companies but, it should be in addition to continuing existing programs. Constellation may be running behind schedule but it is still doing something, instead of nothing.

Don't let him turn NASA into another agency that is piddling global warming lies.

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