NASA has awarded contracts to SpaceX and Orbital Sciences Corp. contracts to deliver cargo to the International Space Station for the next dozen or so years. This is news, big news, huge news, for the geek that I am. From a Wall Street Journal article:
"When the U.S. space shuttle fleet is retired sometime after 2010, such so-called Commercial Orbital Transportation Services contracts temporarily will be the only way for U.S. spacecraft to reach the space station."
This is a huge risk. These companies do not have the traditional experience of building such systems for the government. But the news is even bigger than this.
The procurement will be via the NASA "Commercial Orbital Transportation Services" contract type. So what's the big news about this? It goes like this:
If the government wants to buy, lets say, a military base, it can't just buy one. It puts a team of government employees together to put together ideas for what the base should be like and then look for contractors willing to do it for a good price. This is how our government pretty much gets rockets today. It doesn't buy "rockets", it buys "rocket programs". (As an alternative metaphor, imagine if you couldn't buy clothes for yourself, but instead had to keep creating clothes patterns for what you wanted and shop the designs out to tailors for a good price. That would be an annoying world!)
If the government wants to buy an SUV, it just friggin' buys it. It doesn't need to assemble a team to put together ideas for what an SUV should be like! Sure, there might be some mods but for the most part the government gets in line with the rest of us and buys a friggin' SUV!
THIS is the real news. SpaceX and Orbital want to sell rockets commercially, more or less the way auto companies sell cars. So if our government wants a rocket, it should get in line with telecom companies and other governments and buy the next rocket slot.
This is a big gamble. NASA will take a sort-of hybrid approach, trying to be as hands-off as possible while still assuring success. It will check in on these companies at critical junctures and try to stay out in between. If it works, it would point the way to a new way to procure rockets, though. No more managing the contractors, no more having to create requirements for rockets, no more eating the inevitable cost overruns and the schedule slips. Just buy the next rocket.
If either SpaceX or Orbital succeed, then the entire experiment succeeds because it proves the concept. Even better, there are added dividends for our nation:
0) It proves that space companies can exist as truly private entities pursuing commercial interests. Contrast that to the current base of government contract-driven mega corporations.
1) Commercial companies should spur rocket innovation faster than Lockheed or Boeing or Northrop (or Energia or Arianspace, for the internationally minded) because they can try stuff out without waiting for government permission or government requests.
2) Commercial companies should reduce the overall cost of these systems to the point where more rocket launches should be possible, which should create more higher-paying jobs that are supported by the private industry.
3) By being a commercial company, SpaceX and Orbital will reduce the price not only for satellite operators and governments, but also for our fledgling Space Tourism industry.
All of this is great. Outstanding.
Lastly: I just really want to applaud Elon Musk for having the courage to gamble so much of his private fortune from his PayPal sale to create SpaceX. His achievement cannot be overstated: to privately develop a rocket from scratch. It hurts me a little to say this since I work at one of the government contract-driven megacorporations, but I think that his Silicon Valley shtick is going to rock our Aerospace world.
Tom Hanks
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"I'm glad I didn't have to fight in any war. I'm glad I didn't have to pick
up a gun. I'm glad I didn't get killed or kill somebody. I hope my kids
enjoy t...
14 hours ago
1 comment:
Ha - this post cheered me up. Thanks! Having just cancelled my conference room reservations for the anticipated proposal reviews we were planning this week and next should PlanetSpace had won the contract, I was slightly bummed. My perspective being: PlanetSpace lost=>Lockheed lost. Not just a Lockheed loss, but Lockheed work in Denver loss! Oh, well. I guess if SpaceX and Orbital can overcome the execution risks inherent with this type of contract, kudos to them and interesting prospects for the space industry overall. Excellent post! :)
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