NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said March 25 that the agency does not want to build the heavy-lift rocket mandated by Congress in the 2010 NASA Authorization Act, Spacepolicyonline.com reports.

Speaking at a Space Transportation Association luncheon on Capitol Hill, Bolden said NASA prefers to build a launch vehicle that can be evolved to carry astronauts to deep space destinations.

     โ€œAlthough it is unusual for Congress to dictate detailed technical parameters in law, in this case it did, telling NASA that the new SLS (also known as a heavy lift launch vehicle โ€“ HLLV) must have an initial launch capability of 70-100 metric tons, increasing to at least 130 metric tons with the addition of an integrated upper stage.  The law authorized funding levels for the SLS, MPCV, and commercial crew.โ€

 

 

RELATED ARTICLES



U.S. Lawmakers Question NASAโ€™s Commitment to Heavy Lift



Presidentโ€™s NASA Budget Not Aligned with NEO Vision



Proposed $18.7 Billion NASA Budget Draws Early Fire from Capitol Hill



Exclusive: Space News Interview with NASA Administrator Charles Bolden