In
May this year, the American Space 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 programme continues Boeing’s
tradition of space industry innovation with commercial service to the space station,”
said John Mulholland, Vice President and Programme Manager, Boeing’s commercial
crew programme. “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, Florida, since
the 1960s. |