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Raumfahrt - ISS-ALLtag: NASA planning to spend up to $1 billion on space station deorbit module

15.03.2023

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The International Space Station as seen from a Crew Dragon spacecraft in 2021. Credit: NASA

WASHINGTON — NASA is projecting spending nearly $1 billion on a tug to deorbit the International Space Station at the end of the decade to provide redundancy for safely disposing of the station.

NASA released additional details March 13 about its fiscal year 2024 budget proposal. An outline of the proposal, published by the White House March 9, requested $27.2 billion for the agency, a 7.1% increase from 2023 that roughly keeps pace with inflation.

One of the biggest new initiatives in the budget is the ISS deorbit tug, which would be used to perform the final lowering of the station’s orbit to ensure it reenters over the South Pacific. NASA first indicated its plans for the tug in a request for information last August, but offered few specifics about the vehicle in the budget request.

The $180 million NASA is requesting for the tug “gives us a healthy start” for the project, said Kathy Lueders, NASA associate administrator for space operations, in a media teleconference about the budget.

While budget documents did not include a spending profile for the project, Lueders said the agency came up with a cost estimate “a little bit short of about $1 billion.” The exact amount, she said, will depend on what proposals the agency receives from industry from an upcoming request for proposals (RFP).

“Our goal is to go out with an RFP,” she said. “We’re hoping to get a better price than that.”

NASA has earlier planned to use cargo spacecraft, particularly Russia’s Progress, to deorbit the station. In its request for information last year, the agency said it concluded “additional spacecraft may provide more robust capabilities for deorbit” and decided to ask industry for its concepts.

“We’re always looking for redundancy,” Lueders said, with NASA continuing to work with Roscosmos on using Progress vehicles for deorbiting. “We are also developing this U.S. capability as a way to have redundancy and be able to better aid the targeting of the vehicle and the safe return of the vehicle, especially as we’re adding more modules.”

The tug was one of the few new projects in the budget request, which primarily continues previously announced science, exploration and technology efforts. The budget proposal also supports NASA’s role in the European Space Agency’s ExoMars mission, providing components like thrusters, radioactive heating units and launch services needed for ESA’s Rosalind Franklin rover after ESA terminated cooperation with Roscosmos a year ago.

The budget documents did not spell out funding for ExoMars, but Nicky Fox, NASA associate administrator for science, said the budget proposal includes $30 million in fiscal year 2024 for ExoMars. She added the agency is still working to determine the full cost of its contributions.

Quelle: SN

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