SpaceX Applauds Breakthrough Compromise in U.S. Senate
on NASA Budget
20 July 2010
SpaceX applauds the efforts of the Senate Commerce, Science and
Transportation Committee for their unanimous, bipartisan approval of the NASA
Authorization Act of 2010. This landmark legislation ushers in a new era in
human spaceflight by embracing the commercial sector as a full partner and
recognizing commercial crew services as the primary means of astronaut transport
to the International Space Station (ISS).
“We are pleased that the Senate Commerce Committee has recognized that the
best and only near-term option for eliminating America’s reliance on the Russian
Soyuz for astronaut transportation is the development and use of commercial
systems, such as SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Dragon spacecraft,” said Elon Musk, CEO &
CTO, SpaceX. “For about the same amount that is currently being spent on
purchasing seats on Russian launch vehicles, we can create thousands of
high-tech, high-paying jobs right here at home.”
In 2010, NASA will pay the Russian Space Agency $287.4 million for 6 seats on
Russian Soyuz flights, which amounts to $47.9 million per seat. By 2013, the
price per seat paid to Russia to carry U.S. astronauts will exceed $55 million.
Though it provides less funding than the President’s request, the new
legislation provides $312 million in FY11 funding for the development of
American commercial systems to transport crew to the ISS. SpaceX is one of
several companies currently developing commercial crew technology funded by
NASA, including Nevada-based Sierra Nevada Corporation, Illinois-based Boeing
Company, Colorado-based United Launch Alliance, Washington-based Blue Origin,
Nevada-based Bigelow Aerospace, and Arizona-based Paragon Space Development
Corporation.
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