By Bloomberg Editors
After launching into orbit May
22, the capsule had performed a series of complicated maneuvers, docked with
the International Space Station, dropped off more than 1,000
pounds of supplies and returned home bearing a load of science experiments.
It was the first commercial
spacecraft to complete such a feat. And the company that developed it, Space
Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, was rewarded with a U.S. government
contract of $1.6 billion to fly 12 more supply missions.
Optimists saw a nimble private
company leveraging public investment, reducing future taxpayer burdens and
heralding a new age of commercial space flight.
Skeptics saw a heavily subsidized contractor delivering expensive equipment to an aging government-run colossus, spinning endlessly in unproductive orbit.
Both have a point. SpaceX’s
achievement is impressive, and private enterprise seems likely to bring
much-needed efficiency to the government’s space program. The problem is that,
even if this new partnership delivers all its promised benefits, U.S. space
policy will still have no clear objective.
Good Deal
Despite numerous setbacks,
SpaceX looks like a relatively good deal for taxpayers. Elon Musk, the
company’s billionaire founder, says its missions will cost
one-eighth what space shuttle flights did, and a study last year by the
National Aeronautics and Space Administration found that SpaceX spent far less
than what NASA would have to develop
the rocket that launched the Dragon capsule. Ambitiously, the company aims to
carry humans into space by 2015.
All of which sounds great.
Except that SpaceX’s contract is simply to continue supplying the space station
-- a delightful symbol of international collaboration that has so far cost $100
billion and produced almost nothing of scientific value. Until a national
consensus emerges about what we want to accomplish in space, this expensive
cycle looks likely to continue.
In other words, we’ll be
spinning our wheels, albeit with Musk-like efficiency, unless NASA asserts
sharper objectives for the post-shuttle world and makes clear how it will
encourage -- and make use of -- its growing symbiosis with the private-sector
space industry.
In the best case, SpaceX and
its competitors, including Orbital Sciences Corp.
(ORB), will safely
supply the space station at lower cost until it shuts down, probably in 2020.
Once they demonstrate their efficiency and reliability, NASA can cede more of
its prosaic tasks to the private sector.
This should free the space
agency to concentrate on carrying out advanced missions. The most important
will be manned space flight, the part of NASA’s portfolio that has always been
especially popular and inspiring, and which has reliably attracted money from Congress.
If we’re to get beyond
near-Earth orbit, NASA needs to articulate the ultimate goal of these expensive
expeditions. A government advisory group known as the Augustine
Committeeoffered a smart
way to think about this in a 2009 report. It suggested a “flexible path” for
future missions, in which humans and robots would work in tandem to explore a
logical progression of destinations -- such as the moon and asteroids -- in the
inner solar system.
Mars, Beyond
As successive goals are
reached, and our ability to operate in deep space improves at each step, human
trips to Mars and beyond will become increasingly viable. Working with
international partners should be a priority in such an approach, and it will be
up to the U.S. government to once again show leadership as humanity pushes
farther into the solar system -- hopefully with some help from companies like
SpaceX.
We’re under no illusions that
spending on space is tough when there are so many problems on Earth. But
remember: All that money is being spent terrestrially, and in specific
congressional districts. By conservative estimates, a dollar spent on the space
program yields about $2 in direct and indirect economic benefits. That spending
has sustained a civil workforce with technical expertise, led to advances in
everything from communications to medicine, and inspired a generation of young
people to enter science and engineering.
Harnessing the power of
private enterprise will only enhance these benefits. SpaceX says that with
commercial sales and its government missions, it already has $4 billion in
revenue under contract. Musk told Bloomberg News in February that there’s a
good chance the company will go public next year. One day, SpaceX could reduce
the costs of space flight enough to make money ferrying rich people to the
cosmos.
We wish them and their
competitors the best.
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