Boeing, Northrop face obstacles in commercializing flagship US rocket
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[June 08, 2023]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - NASA's plans to turn over its flagship rocket to
contractors Boeing and Northrop Grumman to find more buyers and bring
down costs faces steep hurdles thanks to meager demand even from the
Pentagon and a sprawling supplier network.
The U.S. space agency is pushing ahead with plans to hand ownership of
the Space Launch System (SLS) to a Boeing-Northrup joint venture in the
next few years, with a goal of cutting in half the rocket's price tag -
estimated at $2 billion. But finding a market for a giant and costly
rocket promises to be difficult, with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD)
- seen as a potential customer - signaling little interest.
"It's a capability right now that we, the DoD, don't need," Colonel
Douglas Pentecost, a senior rocket acquisition official with the U.S.
military's Space Force, said in an interview. "We have the capability
that we need at the affordability price that we have, so we're not that
interested in some partnership with NASA on the SLS system."
As a commercial venture, the SLS could face other challenges including
competition from cheaper and reusable rockets such as Starship from Elon
Musk's SpaceX and New Glenn from fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos's Blue
Origin. The SLS is not reusable.
The SLS is an impressive sight, resembling an immense dart as it towers
as tall as a 32-story building on the launch pad. But it has only ever
served NASA. Its first and only use so far was last November when it was
successfully launched from Florida as part of NASA's Artemis program
that aims to return astronauts to the surface of the moon as early as
2025.
NASA's SLS vision has its skeptics.
"I don't see the cost going down at this point to be competitive, just
given the history and how challenging of a rocket it is to build," said
Cristina Chaplain, former assistant director of the Government
Accountability Office (GAO), the investigative arm of the U.S. Congress.
"Even when they stabilize production, I don't see them having quite the
factory line that you need to get for that kind of thing," added
Chaplain, who led GAO audits of SLS.
A lack of SLS launch dates amid a backlog of Artemis program missions in
the coming years is another roadblock, even if there is demand for the
rocket beyond NASA, Chaplain said.
NASA currently manages SLS production, with Boeing and Northrop its top
contractors, each having contracts under which the space agency bears
any delay costs. Boeing and Northrop executives have declined to discuss
plans for cutting SLS costs under the proposed commercial contract.
Boeing said the potential deal was still being negotiated with NASA.
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NASA's next-generation moon rocket, the
Space Launch System (SLS) rocket with its Orion crew capsule perched
on top, is shown on its launch pad as it is prepared for launch in
Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S. November 12, 2022. REUTERS/Joe
Skipper/File Photo
'A MAP TO GET HERE'
The aim would be for the two companies to sell the rocket to other
customers for the first time, after its decade in development and
successful 2022 debut, NASA officials said. That would let NASA free
up its budget and staff for other programs under Artemis.
"If they can sell it, they (Boeing and Northrop) get more flow
through the factory, that drives down our recurring engineering
cost," Jim Free, head of NASA's space exploration wing overseeing
the Artemis program, said in an interview. "We've thought of a map
to get there, we need them to engage, to agree with that map."
NASA officials said a key part of the plan is finding new customers,
which could include the Pentagon or commercial players.
The Space Force's Pentecost said Boeing has been in talks with U.S.
defense officials to explore offering SLS in the Pentagon's Phase 3
National Security Space Launch competition - a procurement program
expected to buy billions of dollars in launches from multiple
companies. While the SLS meets Pentagon requirements, its slow
production rate "probably doesn't," Pentecost added.
Boeing has said SLS would work well for that program, but told
Reuters that the company is "not actively pursuing" it at this time.
NASA officials have acknowledged that squeezing the roughly $23
billion SLS program, its vast supplier network and a workforce of
thousands of agency and contractor employees into a cheaper and
privately managed contract will not be easy. Boeing has said the SLS
program has created 28,000 jobs.
NASA wants one SLS rocket produced annually for Artemis and plans to
buy four SLS launches from Deep Space Transport, the Boeing-Northrup
joint venture, after the fifth mission. The deal includes an option
to buy five more launches.
Convincing about 400 suppliers across 46 U.S. states, already
struggling with rising labor costs, to increase production and
staffing would be another issue, according to Amit Kshatriya, the
head of NASA's new Moon to Mars office, formed in March to manage
the agency's Artemis and SLS strategy.
Even if Boeing and Northrup do not achieve NASA's cost-cutting
goals, the agency still plans to pressure them on reducing costs,
Kshatriya said.
"We can't just wait and hope that all these answers come as a part
of this one procurement," Kshatriya added.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; Editing by Will Dunham and Ben Klayman)
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