NASA has awarded a mission to Boeing to
transport crew to the International Space Station (ISS) with
flights beginning in 2017.
It is the second time this year that
Boeing has been awarded a crew rotation mission. In May, the
agency awarded Boeing its first commercial human spaceflight
mission.
Boeing will transport the crews using its
Commercial Space Transportation-100 (CST-100) “Starliner”
spacecraft.
The award is technically a task order to
Boeing’s $4.2 billion Commercial Crew Transportation Capability
contract. Boeing could provide as few as two and as many as six
missions to the space station after completing human rating
certification.
“As our company begins its second century, our
Starliner program continues Boeing’s tradition of space industry
innovation with commercial service to the space station,” said
John Mulholland, vice president and program manager, Boeing’s
commercial crew program. “We value NASA’s confidence in the
Starliner system to keep their crews safe.”
Boeing met a series of development milestones in
order to receive NASA’s “Authority to Proceed”. Several of these
milestones were accomplished in 2015 including those demonstrating
integrated design maturity, qualification test vehicle readiness
and reviews demonstrating flight software and checkout and control
systems maturity.
Launch vehicle provider United Launch Alliance
recently completed construction on the main column of the Starliner crew access tower at Space Launch Complex-41, the first
crew tower to be built at Cape Canaveral, Fla., since the 1960s.
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