House
panel asks NASA why it isn't probing SpaceX blast
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[August 07, 2015]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A House panel this
week asked NASA to explain why it hasn't launched an independent review
of the explosion on June 28 of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket, as it did after
the earlier explosion of Orbital ATK Inc's Antares rocket on Oct. 28.
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Both launches were paid for by NASA under separate contracts worth
well more than $1 billion each, and destroyed unmanned rockets
carrying cargo to the International Space Station.
The accidents have raised questions about the U.S. government's
increasing reliance on commercial launch contracts and its oversight
of accident investigations.
The two companies are leading their own investigations, subject to
oversight by the Federal Aviation Administration, which licensed the
launches.
"The discrepancy between the approaches taken by NASA in response to
these two similar events raises questions about not only the equity
and fairness of NASA's process for initiating independent accident
investigations, but also the fidelity of the investigations
themselves," U.S. House Committee on Science, Space and Technology
Chairman Lamar Smith told NASA Administrator Charles Bolden in a
letter dated Aug. 4 that was seen by Reuters.
NASA officials could not be immediately reached for comment.
In the letter, Smith said both NASA's $1.6 billion contract with
privately held SpaceX, and its $1.8 billion contract with Orbital
granted the agency the right to investigate mishaps which involve
NASA personnel or resources.
Smith questioned why NASA created its own independent review team to
look into the Orbital crash and benefit from any lessons learned,
but only asked for a NASA representative to be included in the
SpaceX probe.
He said he found NASA's "hands off approach" to the SpaceX accident
"perplexing" since SpaceX is also developing a system to ferry
astronauts to the space station.
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A spokesman for SpaceX had no immediate comment on the letter, which
came a week after 14 U.S. lawmakers told the U.S. Air Force and NASA
they had "serious concerns" about the fact that SpaceX is
investigating its own accident.
Many of those lawmakers are from districts representing United
Launch Alliance, a joint venture of Lockheed Martin Corp and Boeing
Co that is facing competition from SpaceX for military and spy
satellite launches.
The Air Force last week said it was involved in and was closely
following the SpaceX-led investigation.
Orbital submitted its accident investigation report to the FAA last
week, according to sources familiar with the issue.
SpaceX had no immediate comment on Smith's letter.
(Editing by Bernadette Baum)
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