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commercial support of ISS and lunar base



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 16th 04, 05:15 PM
Joe Strout
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

The White House's "Renewed Spirit of Discovery" document [1] directs the
NASA Administrator to (among many other things):

"Pursue commercial opportunities for providing transportation and other
services supporting the International Space Station and exploration
missions beyond low Earth orbit." (Section D)

This bodes well for companies like SpaceX, SpaceDev, SeaLaunch, etc.,
don't you think?

[1] http://www.whitehouse.gov/space/renewed_spirit.html

Cheers,
- Joe

,------------------------------------------------------------------.
| Joseph J. Strout Check out the Mac Web Directory: |
| http://www.macwebdir.com |
`------------------------------------------------------------------'
  #2  
Old January 16th 04, 05:39 PM
Charles Buckley
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

Joe Strout wrote:
The White House's "Renewed Spirit of Discovery" document [1] directs the
NASA Administrator to (among many other things):

"Pursue commercial opportunities for providing transportation and other
services supporting the International Space Station and exploration
missions beyond low Earth orbit." (Section D)

This bodes well for companies like SpaceX, SpaceDev, SeaLaunch, etc.,
don't you think?



Was there anything in there about "Small Business Set-Aside"?

OSP gave a good taste of their commercialization. They put out
an RFP and took the same commercial providers.

I will believe it will help other companies when NASA actually
starts buying from other companies.


  #3  
Old January 17th 04, 01:10 AM
Hobbs aka McDaniel
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

Charles Buckley wrote in message ...
Joe Strout wrote:
The White House's "Renewed Spirit of Discovery" document [1] directs the
NASA Administrator to (among many other things):

"Pursue commercial opportunities for providing transportation and other
services supporting the International Space Station and exploration
missions beyond low Earth orbit." (Section D)

This bodes well for companies like SpaceX, SpaceDev, SeaLaunch, etc.,
don't you think?



Was there anything in there about "Small Business Set-Aside"?

OSP gave a good taste of their commercialization. They put out
an RFP and took the same commercial providers.

I will believe it will help other companies when NASA actually
starts buying from other companies.


Just the perception that NASA will be buying from a company in the
future will help that company raise money today. Likewise some
companies have been selling advanced bookings on space flights
for years although that speculation may turn out to be shall we
say less than financially sound depending on what the sellers
have been doing with the cash.

-McDaniel
  #4  
Old January 17th 04, 01:10 PM
Charles Buckley
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

Hobbs aka McDaniel wrote:
Charles Buckley wrote in message ...

Joe Strout wrote:

The White House's "Renewed Spirit of Discovery" document [1] directs the
NASA Administrator to (among many other things):

"Pursue commercial opportunities for providing transportation and other
services supporting the International Space Station and exploration
missions beyond low Earth orbit." (Section D)

This bodes well for companies like SpaceX, SpaceDev, SeaLaunch, etc.,
don't you think?



Was there anything in there about "Small Business Set-Aside"?

OSP gave a good taste of their commercialization. They put out
an RFP and took the same commercial providers.

I will believe it will help other companies when NASA actually
starts buying from other companies.



Just the perception that NASA will be buying from a company in the
future will help that company raise money today. Likewise some
companies have been selling advanced bookings on space flights
for years although that speculation may turn out to be shall we
say less than financially sound depending on what the sellers
have been doing with the cash.



There isn't any such perception though. NASA buys from
Boeing, LockMart, and OSC. There isn't anything to really
indicate any change in that.


  #5  
Old January 16th 04, 06:41 PM
Henry Spencer
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

In article ,
Joe Strout wrote:
"Pursue commercial opportunities for providing transportation and other
services supporting the International Space Station and exploration
missions beyond low Earth orbit." (Section D)
This bodes well for companies like SpaceX, SpaceDev, SeaLaunch, etc.,
don't you think?


Such pronouncements have been heard before. They didn't mean anything in
the end. NASA found excuses not to do it.

If the directions had said "All US transportation services supporting ISS
after 1 Jan 2010 will be bought from commercial suppliers", now that would
be different.

(Also note that Sea Launch in particular, since it uses foreign-made
rockets, is not considered a US launch supplier and hence is ineligible
for government business.)
--
MOST launched 30 June; science observations running | Henry Spencer
since Oct; first surprises seen; papers pending. |
  #8  
Old January 17th 04, 06:55 PM
Brian Thorn
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

On Fri, 16 Jan 2004 22:48:46 -0600, Phil Fraering pgf@AUTO wrote:

(Henry Spencer) writes:

(Also note that Sea Launch in particular, since it uses foreign-made
rockets, is not considered a US launch supplier and hence is ineligible
for government business.)


But Atlas V sneaks in under the wire, somehow?


Atlas V is built in the United States, using engines built in Russia.
That's significantly closer than SeaLaunch to what the government
wants, although the Air Force did end up bending its own rules to buy
Atlas V (they were supposed to buy only Atlas V's with US
license-built engines.)

Since Boeing ended up being a bunch of crooks who stole the EELV
competition from Lockheed, the Air Force bending the rules for Atlas V
can be overlooked.

Brian
  #9  
Old January 17th 04, 11:13 PM
Phil Fraering
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base

Brian Thorn writes:

Since Boeing ended up being a bunch of crooks who stole the EELV
competition from Lockheed, the Air Force bending the rules for Atlas V
can be overlooked.


So in short, you believe Lockheed should be allowed to cheat, but
Boeing shouldn't.

--
Phil Fraering
http://newsfromthefridge.typepad.com

  #10  
Old January 17th 04, 11:56 PM
Michael Walsh
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Default commercial support of ISS and lunar base



Phil Fraering wrote:

Brian Thorn writes:

Since Boeing ended up being a bunch of crooks who stole the EELV
competition from Lockheed, the Air Force bending the rules for Atlas V
can be overlooked.


So in short, you believe Lockheed should be allowed to cheat, but
Boeing shouldn't.

--
Phil Fraering
http://newsfromthefridge.typepad.com


Does this mean you don't know the difference between outright
fraud (stealing documents) and the Air Force not enforcing one
of their procurement rules?

Tell me just where you believe Lockheed-Martin cheated?

I feel reasonably sure Lockheed-Martin would not mind using
U.S. built engines as long as the Air Force was willing to pay
for them. Lock-Mart really wouldn't get a great deal of that
money, most of it would go to Pratt & Whitney to produce
the U.S. version of the engine.

At least according to what I read about the original plan.

Mike Walsh


 




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