NASA's Shuttle Program Cost $209
Billion — Was it Worth It?
by Mike Wall,
SPACE.com Senior Writer
Date: 05 July
2011 Time: 09:37 AM ET
When NASA's
space shuttle program was announced back in 1972, it was billed as a major
advance — a key step in humanity's quest to exploit and explore space.
The shuttle
would enable safe, frequent and affordable access to space, the argument went,
with flights occurring as often as once per week and costing as little as $20
million each. But much of that original vision didn't come to pass.
Two of the
program's 134 flights have ended in tragedy, killing 14 astronauts in all.
Recent NASA estimates peg the shuttle program's cost through the end of last
year at $209 billion (in 2010 dollars), yielding a per-flight cost of nearly
$1.6 billion. And the orbiter fleet never flew more than nine missions in a
single year.
The shuttle
program is drawing to a close, with its last-ever mission — the STS-135 flight of Atlantis— slated to launch Friday
(July 8). So now is as good a time as any to ask: Was it worth it? Or, put
another way: Could NASA have found a better use for that $209 billion?
"People
endlessly debate this stuff," said Roger Launius, space history curator at
the Smithsonian's National Air and Space Museum. "You can make a case on
both sides. It's not open-and-shut."
Trapped in
low-Earth orbit
A chief
criticism of the shuttle program is that it prevented more ambitious manned
exploration missions.
There is merit
to that argument, experts say. After all, NASA's Apollo programput boots on the moon in
1969, just 12 years after the space age began. But it's been four decades since
the last manned lunar landing, and in that time, NASA has made little
discernible progress toward the next logical giant leap: getting people to
Mars.
Instead, since
1981, the shuttle has kept zipping around the planet over and over again, just
a few hundred miles above Earth's surface.
"It kept
us limited to low-Earth orbit," said space policy expert John Logsdon,
professor emeritus at George Washington University and author of "John F.
Kennedy and the Race to the Moon" (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
Indeed, some
NASA officials have voiced dissatisfaction with the agency's post-Apollo focus
on the shuttle and the International Space Station, which shuttle missions have
helped build since 1998.
"It is now
commonly accepted that was not the right path," then-NASA chief Michael
Griffin told USA Today in 2005. "We are now trying to change the path
while doing as little damage as we can."
The new path
Griffin referred to was laid out by President George W. Bush's moon-oriented
Constellation program, which President Barack Obama cancelled last year.
Not enough
money for Mars?
It's not as if
NASA dreamed up the shuttle as part of a plan to restrict astronauts to
low-Earth orbit for 30 years. Rather, the vehicle was viewed as a piece of
infrastructure to enable more ambitious exploration down the road, Launius
said.
Back in 1969,
the space agency presented President Richard Nixon with several proposals for
its post-Apollo direction. All of them advocated an integrated program aimed at
getting astronauts to Mars in a series of steps.
Those steps
involved building a shuttle and a space station, then using the station as a
jumping-off point for return trips to the moon and, eventually, manned missions
to Mars. But Nixon thought all of the proposals were too expensive, so he green-lighted
just one aspect of them: the shuttle.
"There was
no political will to continue flights to the moon, or to go off to Mars,"
Logsdon told SPACE.com.
As a result,
there was not enough money to do these things, either. In 1966, NASA's budget
was $5.9 billion (4.4 percent of the federal budget). By 1972, Nixon had cut it
to $3.4 billion (1.6 percent of the budget).
And in the four
decades since, NASA's budget has continued to decrease as a proportion of
national spending. The agency got $18.45 billion in fiscal year 2011, less than
0.5 percent of the federal budget.
"It wasn't
the space shuttle that was preventing us from exploring further," said
space history expert Robert Pearlman, editor of the website collectSPACE.com
and a SPACE.com contributor. "It was the lack of political will to give
NASA more money."
The space
shuttle Discovery launched on its STS-31 mission on April 24, 1990 at 8:33 a.m.
EDT. The mission featured the deployment of the Hubble Space Telescope, the
first of NASA's Great Observatories to reach orbit.
The shuttle's
benefits
While the
shuttle program hasn't lived up to the great — and, in hindsight, unrealistic —
expectations NASA laid out for it in the early 1970s, it has delivered
significant returns over the years, many experts say.
For example,
the shuttle has lofted many important pieces of hardware into space, such as
the Hubble Space Telescope. And shuttle missions
repaired and upgraded Hubble multiple times, enabling scientists to see the
universe as never before.
Further, the
$100 billion International Space Station, which could provide
big research dividends down the road, has taken shape largely as a result of
the shuttle's efforts. And hundreds of experiments performed aboard the
shuttles themselves have provided scientists with new insights in a range of
fields, from biology and medicine to physics and materials science.
In addition to
those achievements, the shuttle program has helped humanity establish a
foothold beyond our home planet for the first time — a major milestone, some
analysts contend.
"We've
gone from where we went to space, and we touched space and we came back,"
NASA space operations chief Bill Gerstenmaier told reporters in a June 28 press
conference. "We now are really in the posture where we're learning to live
in space and operate in space."
Launius agreed.
"It did
create an environment in which spaceflight was an essentially normal
activity," he told SPACE.com. "That was a stunning achievement."
For these
reasons and more, some argue, the shuttle program should be viewed as a success
in many ways.
"On balance,
I think it has been a remarkable era for human accomplishments in space,"
Valerie Neal, curator for contemporary human spaceflight at the Smithsonian,
told SPACE.com. "We set out with ambitions to make spaceflight routine,
and we pretty much succeeded in doing that."
The bottom line
So was the
shuttle program worth the 40 years (10 years of development and 30 years of
flight) and $209 billion that NASA and the nation poured into it? That probably
depends on your priorities and your point of view.
Some people may
always view the shuttle as a costly distraction, a diversion from more
ambitious goals that the nation is just now starting to work toward once again.
Others will regard it as a ringing success, a triumph of American technological
know-how that opened space up and fostered international cooperation like
nothing ever had before.
As for
history's verdict? It will likely fall somewhere in between, experts say.
"It's not
all one way or all the other, in terms of success or failure," Launius
said. "The nuances associated with this are going to be significant in
trying to assess the legacy of the shuttle."
Logsdon voiced
similar sentiments.
People
"will view it with mixed feelings," he said. "It did some
remarkable things. But we flew it for too long, and it cost too much."
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