NASA to Decide Soon on How to Exchange Space Station
Crew
Washington, Feb. 21 2003 (VOA News) -- The U.S. space
agency, NASA, says a decision is close on how to exchange
the international space station crew while the U.S.
shuttle fleet is grounded.
The
moratorium on shuttle flights during the Columbia
disaster probe is putting the spotlight on Russian
Soyuz rockets to serve the station. NASA head Sean
O'Keefe says the 16 nations participating in the space
station program are discussing how to staff the outpost
through the end of the year in the absence of regular
shuttle resupply flights. He told reporters that a
decision is imminent on when to replace the current
three-man U.S.-Russian crew, and whether to dispatch
another team of equal size or to send only two crewmembers
to reduce demand on supplies.
"We're
looking at all those options and we'll be looking
at a conclusion here within a matter of a few days,
as a matter of fact, in terms of which preferred direction
we want to go," he said.
The
current station crew was to be exchanged next month
with a three-member replacement crew flown up on the
shuttle Atlantis. Columbia's disintegration on February
1 caused NASA to halt shuttle flights temporarily.
The
outpost has enough supplies for its crew to survive
through the end of June. If shuttles remain grounded,
a Russian Soyuz, rocket would have to carry out the
crew exchange and bring up new cargo. A Soyuz can
carry three people and was the vehicle that flew the
first crew to the station in 2000.
A
likely time for a station crew swap would be April,
when the Russian space agency had planned to send
up a new Soyuz to replace the one already attached
to the station as an emergency escape vehicle.
A
Soyuz seems almost certain to carry out the exchange
if it occurs in the next few months. Mr. O'Keefe says
shuttles will not fly until the independent investigating
board determines the cause of the Columbia accident.
Board chairman Harold Gehman said Tuesday that finding
will require long and careful analysis because his
panel is examining thousands of debris pieces, everything
done to Columbia since its last mission last year,
and NASA's management, safety, and technical practices.
"There
is a ton of work left to be done in this area. We
are just at the beginning of this analytical work.
We are still receiving information from private citizens
and the U.S. government," he said.
If
U.S. space shuttles are grounded into next year, the
U.S. would continue its dependency on Russian rockets
to supply and staff the space station. But a legal
constraint exists.
Russian
space agency chief Yuri Koptev says he needs money
from the United States or the other station partners
to finance construction of the extra spacecraft needed
for the task. But U.S. law forbids extraordinary payments
to the Russian space agency for the station unless
Washington confirms that Moscow has not provided Iran
with missile or weapons technology in the previous
year.
Whether
the European, Canadian, and Japanese space agencies
fill the Russian space agency's funding gap is undecided.
News reports quote the European space agency's top
representative in Moscow as saying the question has
been discussed.
NASA
administrator O'Keefe says he is confident the 16-nation
partnership will solve the problem.
"Every
member I see and have talked to [is] dedicated to
the objectives of the international space station.
We will work this together as a partnership maintaining
this capability."
--
David McAlary
- Voice of America in Washington
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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