NASA Keen on Handing Over ISS to Commercial Spaceflight Company

The ISS is the largest artificial body in the orbit and can be seen with the naked eye from Earth.

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An astronaut looks down from the International Space Station at the mother planet. (Photo Courtesy: <a href="http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/station/images/index.html">NASA</a>)
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An astronaut looks down from the International Space Station at the mother planet. (Photo Courtesy: NASA)
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Signalling a new era, a top NASA official has said that a commercial spaceflight company may take over the International Space Station (ISS) to carry on key research in the low-Earth orbit.

In a video showing a panel discussion on NASA’s plans towards a mission to Mars, Bill Hill, Deputy Associate Administrator of NASA’s exploration systems development division said the US agency is exploring the option of handing over the international orbiting laboratory to a commercial entity in the next decade.

NASA’s trying to develop economic development in low-Earth orbit. Ultimately, our desire is to hand the space station over to either a commercial entity or some other commercial capability so that research can continue in low-Earth orbit. We figure that will be in the mid-20s.
Bill Hill, Deputy Associate Administrator, Exploration Systems Development Division, NASA
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Increased Push For Commercialisation in Spaceflight Projects

The news came as Expedition 48 Commander Jeff Williams and Flight Engineer Kate Rubins concluded their five-hour and 58-minute spacewalk last weekend where the two NASA astronauts successfully installed the first of two international docking adapters (IDAs).

The IDAs will be used for the future arrivals of Boeing and SpaceX commercial crew spacecraft in development under NASA’s Commercial Crew Programme.

In the video, Hill also explained how NASA is preparing for a crewed Mars mission soon.

Earlier this year, NASA awarded the second round of commercial contracts to resupply the International Space Station to three private spaceflight companies – Orbital ATK, Sierra Nevada and SpaceX.

Every one of these companies gets at least six flights to deliver cargo to the space station, which will begin in late 2019 and extend through 2024.

Orbital ATK of Virginia and SpaceX of California, the winners of the first round of NASA’s Commercial Resupply Services contracts, have already used their own space capsules to send supplies several times to the orbiting lab about 400 km above the Earth.

US President Barak Obama has proposed $19 billion for the US space agency in the fiscal 2017 budget – a little less that $19.3 billion NASA received for the fiscal 2016.

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