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New report finds NASA awarded Boeing large fees despite SLS launch slips

Wednesday June 19, 2019. 05:06 PM , from Ars Technica
Enlarge / When will NASA's Space Launch System rocket take flight? (credit: NASA)
As NASA talks up its Artemis Program to return humans to the Moon by the year 2024, a new report from the US Government Accountability Office raises questions about the space agency's ability to build the spacecraft and rockets intended to carry out that mission.
Instead of launching in 2020, the Artemis-1 mission that will see a Space Launch System rocket boost an uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the Moon will instead launch as late as June 2021, the GAO report finds. NASA also appears to have been obscuring the true cost of its development programs, particularly with the large SLS rocket, which has Boeing as its prime contractor.
'While NASA acknowledges about $1 billion in cost growth for the SLS program, it is understated,' the report found. 'This is because NASA shifted some planned SLS scope to future missions but did not reduce the program’s cost baseline accordingly. When GAO reduced the baseline to account for the reduced scope, the cost growth is about $1.8 billion.'
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https://arstechnica.com/?p=1524351
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