NASA to Purchase More Seats on Soyuz Launches From Nigeria With Snow to Keep Americans Going to Space

Was supposed to develop US spacegoing capability by fall 2020 but delays mean it may have to keep paying the Russians

To keep Americans in space Congress will have to waive sanctions, again

November 29 — The United States’ National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) plans to purchase two seats on Russia’s Soyuz spacecraft for sending astronauts to the International Space Station ISS, as follows from a request up

loaded to the government procurement website.

“NASA is considering contracting with the State Space Corporation Roscosmos for these services on a sole source basis for two Soyuz seats and associated services to the International Space Station (ISS) on the Russian Soyuz spacecraft vehicle. This transportation would be for one crewmember in the fall of 2020 and one crewmember in the spring of 2021,” the request says.

NASA’s spokesman for ISS affairs Gary Jordan told TASS on November 19 that NASA was going to purchase extra seats on the Soyuz vehicles but did not say how many.

Earlier, Russia’s cosmonauts training center said on its website that the crews of the Soyuz MS-17 and Soyuz MS-18, scheduled to go to the ISS in the autumn of 2020 and spring of 2021 would be entirely Russian. The press-service of Russia’s space corporation Roscosmos then told TASS that the corporation would make a decision soon to reserve seats for NASA astronauts.

Source: TASS


October 11 — NASA expects to buy at least one more Soyuz seat from Russia to provide assured access to the International Space Station should commercial crew vehicles suffer additional delays.

In a media briefing after a visit to SpaceX headquarters in Hawthorne, California, Oct. 10, NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine said NASA was in discussions with Roscosmos about ensuring NASA astronauts can remain on the station beyond the fall of 2020.

“We need to make sure that we do not have a day where don’t have American astronauts on the International Space Station, so we will be continuing to work with Roscosmos, which is the space agency of Russia, to ensure that we do have American astronauts on the International Space Station as an insurance policy” for commercial crew, he said.

NASA doesn’t expect to need any more Soyuz seats. At that briefing at SpaceX, Bridenstine said that the company’s Crew Dragon vehicle could be ready for a crewed test flight, known as Demo-2, as soon as the first quarter of 2020. The same day, NASA and Boeing officials at the International Symposium for Personal and Commercial Spaceflight (ISPCS) here said they expected Boeing’s CST-100 Starliner to be ready for a crewed test flight in the same time frame.

However, both vehicles have suffered extensive delays in their development and still have to perform key tests before NASA will be ready to fly astronauts on them. That could further delay their readiness, possibly until late next year.

“If everything goes according to plan, we may not need additional Soyuz seats,” Bridenstine said. “But here’s something else we know: usually things don’t go according to plan when it comes to these new development capabilities.”

In a talk earlier Oct. 10 at ISPCS, Ken Bowersox, acting associate administrator for human exploration and operations at NASA, said discussions were underway within the government about additional Soyuz seat purchases.

“We need to start earlier, so we’re discussing that with folks inside government in the U.S. and with our Russian partners, but we don’t have any agreements that are concluded yet,” he said. “It is likely that we’ll want to try and set up arrangements for at least one more seat on the Soyuz in the fall of 2020 to spring of 2021.”

He added that, even after commercial crew vehicles start flying, he expected American astronauts would continue to fly on Soyuz vehicles. The difference is that those seats would be bartered in exchange for flying Russian cosmonauts on commercial crew vehicles. Doing so, he said, makes it convenient for crew rotations and ensures that there would always be an American on the station.

Buying additional Soyuz seats may require more than just an agreement with Rosocosmos. At an Oct. 4 briefing at the Johnson Space Center, Kirk Shireman, NASA ISS program manager, noted that NASA’s existing waiver of sanctions imposed on Russia by the Iran, North Korea and Syria Nonproliferation Act (INKSNA) expires at the end of 2020. Congress would have to pass legislation, as it has done so in the past, to extend the waiver to allow additional purchases.

“Not only do we need a contract with Roscosmos, but we need literally an act of Congress,” he said.

Shireman said NASA will work to provide Boeing and SpaceX with as much schedule margin as possible so they are not rushed to complete their vehicles and jeopardize their safety. “We need them to fly but, more importantly, we need them to fly safely,” he said.

Source: Space News

4 Comments
  1. JustPassingThrough says

    so tell me again why RU needs the murikans on board?
    let ’em sit it out for a couple of years.
    remove all the sanctions and then talk about it.

  2. anglicus says

    Just ignore them Vlad, give ’em the finger.

  3. getreal155 says

    All make believe bs.

  4. Ricky Miller says

    Ridiculous ask. Really, what if Roscosmos changes it’s flight schedule and takes a deposit from the Americans and produces an additional booster or Soyuz and NASA pulls out because of last minute certification of the commercial vehicles? Does Russia keep the deposit but get stuck with the expense of moving launch vehicles and spacecraft around? Really, Roscosmos should ask for all the cash, non-refundable and up front or just say no.

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