Space Industry and Business News  
Space chiefs ponder ISS transport problem, post-2015 future

by Staff Writers
Paris (AFP) July 17, 2008
The heads of five agencies building the International Space Station staged talks here Thursday on tackling a looming transport problem for the ISS and gave positive signals for extending the orbital outpost's life beyond 2015.

The ISS will need extra transport for crew and freight to substitute for the US space shuttle, scheduled to be retired in 2010 when the ISS is completed.

A US replacement for the shuttle, a rocket-and-capsule system called Aries-Orion, is due to be operational around 2015.

The head of the Russian Space Agency, Anatoly Perminov, told reporters that the United States and Russia will hold talks on beefing up flights by the Soviet-era workhorse, Soyuz, to ferry astronauts to and from the ISS between 2011 and 2014.

"By the end of this year or by the beginning of next year at the latest, the whole rationale for our cooperation will be laid out," Perminov told a press conference at European Space Agency (ESA) headquarters.

Possible shuttle substitutes for freight, mulled by the agency chiefs, are commercial operators as well as Japan's unmanned cargo ship, the H-II Transfer Vehicle (HTV), due to be launched for the first time next year by its H-2 rocket, the Russian supply vessel Progress, and ESA's own cargo ship, which docked automatically with the ISS in March.

Begun in 1998, the ISS is scheduled to be completed in 2010 after suffering long delays as a result of the loss of the shuttle Columbia and enduring major cost overruns.

The US has shouldered the lion's share of the cost. The four other partners are Russia, ESA, Japan and Canada.

NASA Administrator Mike Griffin told the press conference that the ISS would be a 100-billion-dollar (63-billion-euro) asset when completed, and it was unlikely that the station's partners would want to give up this investment when the facility's official life comes to an end.

"I believe all the partners expect to go to their governments supporting the extension of the station's life... beyond 2015. I personally think the station will continue to be used as long as its use is productive.

"I think the idea of having a fixed end-date for the space station is technically and politically unrealistic," said Griffin.

"One doesn't put up a 500-tonne orbiting research facility, one doesn't decide to simply shut it off because a certain calendar date has been reached.

"There will come a day when the space station's sustenance costs us as a partnership more than the value of the research that continues to be generated from it and on that day the partnership to move on to other things. But that will be a utility-driven decision in my opinion, not a date-driven decision."

The agency chiefs hailed what they said had been an excellent year for the ISS, with the addition of several important modules.

Griffin said the ISS had been a testbed for future cooperation. He mentioned US plans to set up a lunar colony and eventually head to Mars.

"The partnership will outlive the space station," he said.

Related Links
Station at NASA
Station and More at Roscosmos
S.P. Korolev RSC Energia
Watch NASA TV via Space.TV
Space Station News at Space-Travel.Com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Two Russian cosmonauts begin new space walk
Moscow (AFP) July 15, 2008
Two Russian cosmonauts on board the International Space Station (ISS) began a new space walk Tuesday to finish off work begun during an earlier operation last week, the Russian space centre said.







  • Google-Viacom lawsuit deal cloaks YouTube user identities
  • Brazilians first to unlock new iPhone: reports
  • Microsoft seeks partners for new bid for Yahoo: WSJ
  • Yahoo defends Google deal, bashes Icahn agenda

  • AMC-21 Is Delivered To Spaceport
  • Sea Launch Delivers Echostar 11 To Orbit
  • Countdown Underway For The Launch Of The Echostar XI Satellite
  • Sea Launch Sets Sail For EchoStar XI Launch

  • British PM blasts polluting 'ghost' flights
  • Air China says it is to buy 45 Boeing aircraft
  • Raytheon Leads Team To Evaluate Impact Of New Classes Of Aircraft For NASA
  • Bombardier launches 'green' aircraft programme

  • DRS Completes Testing Of PMM System
  • Boeing To Demo Net-Centric Upgrade On AWACS Aircraft
  • Satellite's Instrumentation Providing Scintillation Forecast Data
  • USAF E-8C Joint STARS Airframes Operationally Viable Through 2070

  • Satellite Users Group Opposes UTC Request
  • EchoStar XI Satellite Deploys Solar Arrays On Schedule
  • Eutelsat W5 Satellite Performance Stabilised
  • Integral To Provide Carrier Monitoring And Interference Detection Capability To Telenor

  • Raytheon IDS Names Del Checcolo Vice President, Engineering
  • John B. Higginbotham Appointed CEO Of Integral Systems
  • Sea Launch Transitions To New Leadership
  • Caprock Communications Names David Cavossa VP Of Satcom Division For Arrowhead Global Solutions

  • ESA To Consult The Science Community On Earth Explorer Selection
  • NASA's Deep Impact Films Earth As An Alien World
  • ESA Launches Program In Support Of Earth Observation Science
  • Astrium Purchases Majority Share In Spot Image

  • Garmin Proves Great Britain Is More Than Just Torque
  • Personal Navigation Most Popular LBS Application For Next Five Years
  • Ford's New Smart Intersection Talks To Cars To Help Reduce Fuel-Wasting Congestion
  • Real-Time Corrections Service For In-the-Field High-Accuracy Mapping

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement