The ISS is entering a transition period, as NASA works to encourage the
development of private space stations in Earth orbit.
The International Space Station's final nine years are going to be busy.
NASA just released a report outlining the big-picture goals for the rest of
the orbiting lab's operational life, which is expected to end with a
controlled deorbit in January 2031.
These goals are: enabling deep-space exploration, conducting research to
benefit humanity, inspiring our species to greater heights, leading and
encouraging international cooperation and helping the U.S. private
spaceflight industry gain more momentum.
"The International Space Station is entering its third and most productive
decade as a groundbreaking scientific platform in microgravity," Robyn
Gatens, director of the International Space Station at NASA headquarters,
said in a statement Monday (Jan. 31). (The orbiting lab has hosted rotating
astronaut crews continuously since November 2000.)
"This third decade is one of results, building on our successful global
partnership to verify exploration and human research technologies to support
deep space exploration, continue to return medical and environmental
benefits to humanity, and lay the groundwork for a commercial future in
low-Earth orbit," Gatens added. "We look forward to maximizing these returns
from the space station through 2030 while planning for transition to
commercial space destinations that will follow."
NASA has been laying the groundwork for that transition for some time now.
For example, in December 2021, the agency awarded a total of $415 million to
three companies — Blue Origin, Nanoracks and Northrop Grumman — that are
leading efforts to build private space stations in Earth orbit.
NASA also holds a separate agreement with Houston-based company Axiom Space,
which will launch multiple modules to the International Space Station (ISS)
starting in late 2024. These modules will eventually detach from the
orbiting lab, forming a privately operated "free flyer" in orbit.
The agency has said that it wants at least one of these private outposts to
be up and running before the ISS is decommissioned, so that there's no gap
in orbital research. Such work is needed to prepare for ambitious efforts
like a crewed missions to Mars, which NASA aims to pull off in the 2030s.
NASA's agreements with Blue Origin, Nanoracks, Northrop Grumman and Axiom
represent the first phase of a planned two-phase effort to spur the
development of commercial low-Earth orbit destinations (CLD) during the
2020s, according to the new 24-page document, which is called "International
Space Station Transition Report."
"The first phase is expected to continue through 2025," the report states.
"For the second phase of NASA’s approach to a transition toward CLDs, the
agency intends to certify for NASA crewmember use CLDs from these and
potential other entrants, and ultimately, purchase services from destination
providers for crew to use when available."
The second phase in this plan will be similar to the approach NASA has taken
with private crew transportation services to and from the ISS, according to
the report. In 2014, the agency awarded multibillion-dollar contracts to
both SpaceX and Boeing. SpaceX has gotten up and running, launching multiple
crewed missions to and from orbit with its Falcon 9 rocket and Crew Dragon
capsule since May 2020. Boeing still needs to ace an uncrewed test flight to
the ISS before its CST-100 Starliner can carry astronauts.
The switch from the ISS to commercial outposts will end up saving NASA
considerable amounts of money, which the agency can put toward deep-space
exploration projects, the report notes.
"This savings is estimated to be approximately $1.3 billion in 2031, ramping
up to $1.8 billion by 2033," the report states.