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In 2004, the Bush administration approved a plan for NASA to build a base on the moon by 2020 at latest, to be used as a platform for launching humans to Mars. Andrew Lawler, “Obama Facing Tough Decision on Whether to Keep Aiming for the Moon,” Science (Sept. 25, 2009), 1616-07. Although considerable skepticism was voiced at that time and since, the first phases of the plan were at least sufficiently concrete to permit a reasonable estimate of its cost. For that reason, many in Congress oppose major deviations from the plan. The plan also envisions retiring the Space Shuttle in 2010 in favor of a new launcher called Constellation, which would be used for constructing the proposed moon base.
During the spring of 2009, President Obama appointed a Committee to Review U.S. Human Space Flight Plans, chaired by Norman Augustine, retired CEO of the Lockheed Martin Corporation. A summary of the resulting Augustine committee report was released early in September, in time for hearings before the House Science and Technology Committee on September 15-16. The complete 115-page report was released on October 22.
The committee report made no recommendations, but suggested several options that NASA should consider. American Institute of Physics Bulletin , op. cit . (Sept. 11, 2009). These included:
One significant option suggested by the Augustine committee review appeared on the first page of its summary: “Space exploration has become a global enterprise.” Noting that the total of other nations’ funding for space programs is comparable to that of NASA, the committee recommended that the United States consider partnering with other nations “to chart a path for human expansion into the solar system.”
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