Air
Force says rocket accident won’t bump SpaceX from competition
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[July 02, 2015]
By Irene Klotz and Andrea Shalal
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla./WASHINGTON (Reuters)
- SpaceX can compete to launch a U.S. Global Positioning System
satellite despite a Falcon 9 rocket accident this weekend, the Air Force
said on Wednesday.
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“SpaceX remains certified and can compete for the upcoming GPS III
launch service,” Lt. General Samuel Greaves, who heads the Air
Force’s Space and Missile Systems Center, wrote in an email to
Reuters.
The Air Force plans to release a solicitation for launch service
proposals this month, the first time SpaceX, which is owned and
operated by technology entrepreneur Elon Musk, will be eligible to
compete against United Launch Alliance (ULA). The joint-venture of
Lockheed-Martin and Boeing has had a monopoly on the military’s
launch business.
In May, SpaceX won a hard-fought, two-year battle to have its Falcon
9 rocket certified to fly military and national security satellites.
On Sunday, one of those rockets exploded after liftoff.
The cause of the accident, which claimed a cargo ship heading to the
International Space Station for NASA and was the first Falcon 9
launch failure in 19 flights, is under investigation.
While not directly involved in the mission, the Air Force said it
has been invited to observe the accident investigation and has
offered support.
SpaceX is leading the investigation, with support from NASA and the
Federal Aviation Administration, which oversees commercial space
launches in the United States.
Preliminary analysis indicates a problem with the liquid oxygen
system of the rocket’s upper-stage engine.
SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell told reporters after the accident
that Falcon 9 launches would be suspended “a number of months, or
so” pending the results of the investigation.
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“We are working with our partners to prepare for potential delays on
the order of a few months,” SpaceX wrote in an email to Reuters.
The rocket that blew up on Sunday was the third cargo ship lost in
the past eight months. In October, an Orbital ATK Antares rocket
exploded seconds after liftoff from Virginia. Orbital is buying new
engines for the rocket and expects to return to flight next year.
In April, a Russian Progress capsule failed to separate properly
from its Soyuz launcher, dooming the ship. Russia hopes to break the
string of launch failures with liftoff of another Soyuz rocket and
Progress capsule at 12:55 a.m. EDT/0455 GMT on Friday.
(irene.klotz@thomsonreuters.com; Editing by Christian Plumb)
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