Boeing has received notification that NASA will
invest $460 million for further development of the Boeing
Commercial Crew Transportation System in the third round of the
Commercial Crew Program: Commercial Crew Integrated Capability (CCiCap).
"This award will enable us to build on the
successes achieved in our Commercial Crew Development (CCDev) and
CCDev-2 work for effective development through Critical Design
Review, as we progress toward human rating and certification,"
said John Mulholland, vice president and program manager of Boeing
Commercial Programs. "We look forward to providing a complete
end-to-end transportation service to support NASA crew
transportation to and from the International Space Station (ISS),
and fostering a growing market for commercial transportation to
other low Earth orbit destinations."
The CCiCap award addresses development
milestones to be completed in a 21-month base period, with the
potential for additional milestones in a subsequent options
period.
Under CCDev and CCDev-2, Boeing has
successfully completed tests on engines, abort systems,
propulsion, heat shield jettison, attitude control systems and
landing to provide full data on functional elements of the
spacecraft's design.
"This award demonstrates NASA's confidence in
Boeing's approach to provide commercial crew transportation
services for the ISS," said John Elbon, Boeing vice president and
general manager of Space Exploration. "It is essential for the ISS
and the nation that we have adequate funding to move at a rapid
pace toward operations so the United States does not continue its
dependence on a single system for human access to the ISS."
Boeing is preparing for its initial test flight
with a United Launch Alliance Atlas V launch vehicle as early as
2016.
See other recent news regarding:
Travel News Asia,
Interviews,
Pictures,
Sports Tourism,
Videos,
Boeing,
NASA,
Space Tourism
|