Space Access Update #112 09/19/05 Copyright 2005 by Space Access Society ________________________________________________________________________ Do not hit "reply" to email us - it'll be buried in tides of spam, and we won't ever see it. Email us at space.access@space-access.org ________________________________________________________________________ Some things take more thought than others. We've been watching all summer as the details of NASA's new exploration plan come out, trying to decide what to make of it all. We're pretty much obliged to, since we're part of a coalition called Space Exploration Alliance that exists to support NASA exploration funding - we signed up with SEA last year, supporting the initial increases while we waited hopefully to see just how much actual useful NASA reform we might get. (Standard Disclaimer: NASA is not one monolithic outfit, but a diverse flock of organizations flying in loose formation. Nor does NASA lack for good people trying hard to accomplish useful things for the country. We'll be using "NASA" as shorthand here for by far the largest single part of the agency, the Human Spaceflight establishment that consumes well over half the agency's overall budget. Forty-five years after being thrown together in a great hurry for Apollo, this NASA carries a heavy burden of institutional prejudices, political constraints, and redundant structure. It is, in short, a mature bureaucracy, powerfully resistant to making any real changes in its organizational structure or operational approach.) As of this writing, the new NASA plan - formally, the Exploration Systems Architecture Study or ESAS - still isn't official. But the basics of ESAS are pretty well known. It has been delayed two months now, as White House Office of Management and Budget reportedly had problems with the large increases over their NASA exploration budget baseline that the initial version of ESAS called for. It looks like part of these increases have been squeezed out, or offset by promised cuts elsewhere. ESAS has been accepted by the White House and passed on to Congress. Public release is today, Monday September 19th. To be blunt, we have big problems with this plan. It's the same basic approach as Apollo, disposable (mostly) spacecraft, on big NASA- proprietary boosters, flown a few times a year, by a standing army of NASA and contractor employees. This is Apollo 2.0, with somewhat more delivered exploration, at moderately higher cost, on a significantly slower schedule. We have to ask, after forty years of stunning technological progress, shouldn't we be able to improve on Apollo's cost-to-exploration ratio a bit more than this? US taxpayers will get little more Buck Rogers for their inflation-adjusted buck than they did in the 1960's. And we must remember, that's before the overruns and delays. This is still Old NASA - there's no radical organizational reform in this plan. However, we have a much more fundamental problem with ESAS. This Apollo redux has the same fatal flaw as Apollo: The specialized throwaway systems invented to get (back) to the Moon ASAP were (will be) far too labor-intensive at far too low a max flight rate to allow affordable followup. The new ships are not only based in significant part on existing Shuttle components and facilities, but they are to be operated in significant part by the existing Shuttle organization. IE, tens of thousands of people narrowly specialized in various aspects of flying a handful of astronauts on a handful of missions a year - at, by the time all this fixed overhead is added up, billions of dollars a mission. Like Apollo, NASA's new ESAS plan has built into it the seeds of its shutdown by some future Congress, once the warm glow of the first few daring missions has once again faded. If, in fact, this program gets that far. Apollo had a powerful political reason for its get-there-FAST-and-screw-longterm-costs approach - it was a major exercise in fighting the Cold War by means other than war, competing with the USSR in the realm of perceived national technological prowess. Settling the battle by a joust between champions rather than the armies fighting, as it were... As such, Apollo was not going to be cancelled while we still had any chance of winning the race. This ESAS plan does not enjoy that luxury - the two chief motivators behind funding for it are the diffuse national sense of pride that "we do space best", and Congressional reluctance to accept major job losses at the various NASA manned spaceflight centers and contractors. That national sense of pride in NASA has been taking a pounding lately; it may not survive many more blows. Once it goes, all bets are off in the Congress. NASA manned space, absent the national pride component, is a regional interest, and as such vulnerable in a time of tight budgets. This ESAS, with its multiple large upfront developments of big new NASA- proprietary vehicles and its lack of serious reform of the existing agency, is far too dependent on NASA not shooting itself in the foot anymore over the next few election cycles. Potential additional Shuttle problems aside, it's been a long time since NASA successfully developed a big new rocket on schedule and budget. As we wrote in Update #103 back in April '04: "Moon, Mars, & Beyond.. ...depends utterly on major reform and restructuring of NASA for any chance of success. Attempting to pursue MM&B without fundamentally changing the agency that brought us Shuttle, Station, and X-33 won't fly... Old NASA would not be able to do the job at anywhere near a sustainable budget." But what we've watched emerge this summer is not a plan to transform NASA - it's a plan to avoid NASA having to undergo very much genuine change at all. That's the other aspect of the disconnect here: ESAS follows the old Apollo ignore-longterm-costs roadmap, not because of urgent national requirement - if we're in a hurry, this plan doesn't show it, with the first new Moon mission slated for thirteen years on (Apollo made it in eight) - but as best we can tell because repeating Apollo requires the least organizational risk and change from NASA. Ultimately, NASA wants to do Apollo again because Apollo is what NASA was designed for, and in the thirty years since it ended they've downsized and ossified, but never fundamentally changed. (Note that the last time NASA had a chance to reinvent itself, the transition from Apollo to Shuttle, their mantra was "keep the Team together" against the day when the funding taps would open again. The result was that they repeatedly solved problems with Shuttle by throwing existing manpower at them, leading directly to Shuttle's impossibly high fixed costs. This ESAS repeats that error.) Mind, we see no malice in this latest NASA plan. We have a great deal of respect for the people who came up with it. But it is the end result of, step by step, accommodating NASA's existing constraints and structures and bad habits, rather than overturning them as required. (True, it's not at all clear the top-level political support is available to do the painful things it'd take to genuinely reform NASA, notably massive white-collar layoffs in a number of Congressional districts - but it's a moot point, as this plan doesn't try.) We strongly urge the White House and the Congress to tell NASA to go back and come up with a practical plan for transforming themselves into a useful national space exploration agency. ESAS isn't it. (Of course, we're not holding our breath. See above about the unpopularity of massive white-collar layoffs in multiple Congressional districts. More fundamentally, most of the people making these decisions seem genuinely unaware that there's a problem here, that better is possible. Must be our fault - we'll have to email our Updates to more of 'em... But the unliklihood of our being heeded does not relieve us of our responsibility to speak the truth as we see it on an impending boondoggle of this magnitude.) Once what's come out unofficially so far becomes official, we will have no choice but to decline further support for new NASA exploration funding, and if as seems likely we can't persuade our fellow SEA members to join us, we will have to regretfully resign. An important point: We said "decline further support", not "actively oppose". Frankly, we don't see much chance of stopping this thing this year - we expect we can find far more productive uses for our limited resources than actively trying. Besides, there are potentially useful bits in ESAS, not least of them the plan's flirtation with Station resupply being put out to commercial bid. Mind, with all due respect to various of our colleagues who pin large hopes on this, we have to say we see a strong liklihood that it, along with all sorts of other useful NASA non-manned-space functions (what does that first "A" stand for again?) will end up defunded to pay for ESAS's big upfront vehicle developments. We also see considerable danger that commercial Station resupply will turn into (despite the best will in the world by those at HQ conceiving it) a tarbaby (a glue-trap for you kids never taught the old folk tales) as the people actually administering Station set impossible standards for would-be vendors, until they go broke and go away. (Last we heard, not even Shuttle and Soyuz meet the official "prox ops" Station docking rules; both had to be grandfathered in.) Our hypothetical turf-jealous Station managers could then go to Congress saying "see, those damned amateurs couldn't hack it, now fund us pros to do the job!" If in fact Station resupply becomes a tarbaby, if too many actual useful projects gets trimmed as the big new space vehicle developments eat everyone else's lunch, then we will decide whether we actually want to throw ourselves into organizing everyone who'll listen to bite NASA's ankle. Until then, we will probably be content to occasionally add to our already large collection of NASA I-told-you-so's, in between getting on with the real work. So, What *Should* NASA Do? Three Things: - NASA should let go of controlling their own space transportation from start to finish. They should make an exploration plan based on a variety of existing commercially available boosters, then put the entire ground-to-orbit leg of their new deep space missions out to bid. - NASA should lay off and/or BRAC large parts of their Shuttle/Station establishment as Shuttle is shut down and Station completed, rather than again compulsively trying to "keep the team together". It's been a long time since this team had a winning season, the payroll is crippling, and the game has changed. Rebuild from the ground up. - NASA should let go of numerous arbitrary and/or dated "this is best" prejudices the organization has accumulated over the years. Old NASA (as someone once said of a notoriously inbred european royal house) forgets nothing, and it learns nothing. Doing the ground-to-orbit leg commercially is key to any hope of getting costs down low enough for sustainable ongoing exploration. This ESAS prevents NASA actually saving significant money shutting Shuttle down, saddles NASA with huge upfront development costs for new boosters ($10- $15 billion is their current estimate) and then locks NASA into these high-staff high-cost low-flightrate NASA-proprietary boosters forever. (Or until Congress gets tired of paying and shuts the whole thing down.) Planning exploration missions for a variety of commercial boosters does several good things. It gives greater program reliability - if one booster has a problem, traffic can be switched to another without putting the program on hold for two years. It gives lower costs, directly as commercial providers compete, indirectly as NASA takes advantage of the cheaper lift to allow engineering more margin into spacecraft designs (thus reducing both development and operating costs), and it reduces future costs even further since newer cheaper launchers can be phased in as commercial competition makes them available. A longish digression into consequences Or why NASA prefers not to do this, and why they're wrong A variety of current commercially available boosters can lift 10-20 tons at a time into low orbit. Building NASA's Exploration plans around these would entail accepting orbital assembly of deep-space missions right from the start. NASA strongly dislikes orbital assembly: - It requires more overall tonnage to be launched. NASA habitually regards minimum tonnage launched per mission as a key figure-of-merit, missing that launching 60 tons on multiple commercial launchers would likely end up significantly cheaper than launching 40 tons on a CLV, even before factoring in the $5 billion CLV development cost, let alone the lower exploration spacecraft development and operating costs greater weight margins and redundancy would allow. - It can also require storing rocket propellant for long times, and NASA prefers liquid hydrogen propellant (again because of their assumption that minimum tonnage launched is a key figure of merit) which is high performance but hard to handle and hard to store for long. Orbital assembly would require NASA to finally take a serious look at whether commercially launching greater masses of somewhat lower- performance but far easier to handle and store propellants might not make for lower overall costs. - It makes it much harder to have NASA's traditional small army of inspectors with clipboards hover over every step of the process right up till final mission launch into deep space. Orbital assembly would force NASA towards simpler more modular systems with higher engineering margins, again going against their habit of making everything as lightweight high-performance tightly-integrated-to-the-point-of- unrepairability as possible to well beyond the steep part of the development and operating cost curves. (Note too that simpler more rugged modular systems are exactly what's needed if orbitally assembled exploration spacecraft are to be reusable and maintainable, rather than the one-shot throwaways planned under ESAS.) - It means launch windows for the fastest routes to the Moon come only every week-and-a-half or so from a given orbital assembly point. This is a big problem if you're using NASA's preferred hard-to-store liquid hydrogen propellant and you miss a launch window; much less so with easier to store alternatives, or with slightly larger spare propellant margins allowing wider launch windows, or with somewhat slower multi- burn orbits that allow far more frequent launch windows. - It requires a greater number of launches, thus more chance for one to go wrong, shutting the program down for years and making NASA look bad. To this we say, most of the launches will be unmanned, carrying some spacecraft modules (build spares) but mostly bulk rocket propellant. If one goes bad, launch a backup on a different booster and carry on, while the failed booster provider fixes the problem. THEIR problem, since they're a commercial provider. - It requires routine on-orbit ops, whether Mir-style module-docking or more extensive spacesuited hand-assembly. NASA is going to have to go to orbital assembly sooner or later anyway - even they admit that anything beyond basic Moon landing missions will quickly outgrow their proposed new heavy lifter. Might as well start now and save the heavy lifter development billions. - It requires major changes in the way NASA habitually does just about everything it's done for the last thirty years. The organization is likely more than a bit brittle, and might even break rather than bend that far. If so, well, then we needed a new national space exploration agency anyway. Bottom line is, there are major benefits to NASA's biting the on-orbit assembly bullet from the start, rather than putting it off till later on when the missions (inevitably) outgrow somewhat larger single launches. One huge benefit being that the more economical and flexible operations that result will mean there's a far better chance there will BE a later for NASA manned deep space exploration... We expect NASA will argue otherwise. They will come up with all sorts of plausible sounding reasons why their preferred approach is best. Keep in mind as the plausibility piles up, though, that at root this ESAS proposes to redo Apollo with modest improvements, for more money, over more time. We've already done as well as this plan. Forty years of progress later, we can and should and must do better than this ESAS for the sizable slice of national resources NASA is asking for. ________________________________________________________________________ Space Access Society's sole purpose is to promote radical reductions in the cost of reaching space. You may redistribute this Update in any medium you choose, as long as you do it unedited in its entirety. You may reproduce sections of this Update beyond obvious "fair use" quotes if you credit the source and include a pointer to our website. ________________________________________________________________________ Space Access Society http://www.space-access.org space.access@space-access.org "Reach low orbit and you're halfway to anywhere in the Solar System" - Robert A. Heinlein