By Amaani Lyle
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, June 20, 2012 – As part of
the Defense Department’s ongoing efforts to maintain assured, affordable access
to space through 2030, the Atlas V rocket successfully lifted off from Space
Launch Complex-41 at Florida’s Cape Canaveral today, Air Force officials said.
“This is an exciting time for the U.S.
space launch community, said Scott Correll, the program’s executive officer.
“From today’s successful launch of the 50th EELV to the recent success of Space
X’s support to NASA with their Falcon 9 it's clear the commercial space
transportation industry is making notable strides.”
The EELV program replaced the existing
fleet of launch systems with two families of launch vehicles -- the Boeing
Delta IV and Lockheed Martin Atlas V -- built and operated by the DOD’s prime
contractor, United Launch Alliance, Correll said.
An official from the Space and Missile
Systems Center at Los Angeles Air Force Base explained that the Atlas V is a
critical part of a spectrum of government missions.
“Atlas V launches space-based infrared
systems, global positioning systems, the defense meteorological satellite
program, and the advanced extremely-high frequency system satellites,” said Air
Force Col. Bob Hodgkiss, director of the launch systems directorate. “I’m pleased
to report that this year we have also already launched the wideband global
sat-com IV aboard a Delta IV, and the Navy’s mobile user objective system
satellite 1 aboard Atlas V.”
Because of considerable program costs,
which can run as high as several billion dollars per launch, quality assurance
and the development of a competitive market are paramount, Air Force officials
said.
“Since the Air Force must by law
self-indemnify, we do a very rigorous evaluation of the physical, electrical
and radio frequency interfaces between the rocket, the satellite and the ground
systems,” Hodgkiss said of the process to determine flight readiness. “My team
is the government’s insurance policy, so we need to be sure we have the highest
probability of success in one of the riskiest activities the Air Force does.”
On the business side of the program,
Hodgkiss said, the program’s primary users, the Air Force, NASA, and the
National Reconnaissance Office are developing strategies to infuse competition
into space launch as a cost reduction measure.
“We are balancing the commitment we will
make to ULA with the potential to reintroduce competition to the program when
one or more commercial launch companies have demonstrated to the Air Force they
are reliable launch providers,” the colonel said.
Correll asserts that certifying new
entrants will potentially enable competition, thereby lowering costs and
creating innovation in government payloads such as communications, navigation,
weather satellites, and science and national security missions.
“The framework offers multiple paths to
on-ramp potential new entrants and part of this strategy requires an entrant to
demonstrate at least one launch of a vehicle configured as an EELV class
national security space launch,” he said.
ULA's next launch and the NRO’s next
mission, the Delta IV NROL-15, is scheduled for June 28.
“Our soldiers, sailors, Marines, airmen,
Coast Guardsmen and intelligence community are dependent upon the warfighting
capabilities we enable,” Correll said. “Our priority and focus remain mission
success first while controlling costs in this constrained fiduciary
environment.”
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