LE BOURGET, France โ The U.S.-European Mars exploration program featuring launches in 2016 and 2018 is facing new turbulence following the French governmentโs refusal to endorse new spending until the 2018 mission is better defined and given a bigger budget, according to European government and industry officials.
The French space agency, CNES, had already signaled to its fellow European Space Agency (ESA) governments in late May that it needed more time to evaluate the impact of NASAโs decision to scrap a NASA rover in 2018 in favor of a joint NASA-ESA vehicle.
Lone among ESA governments taking part in the mission, CNES voted against forwarding ESAโs ExoMars program, which includes a 2016 Mars orbiter in addition to the 2018 launch of the rover, to ESAโs check-writing body, called the Industrial Policy Committee.
CNESโs concerns were apparently insufficient to prevent ESAโs Human Spaceflight and Operations Directorate, meeting May 26-27, from approving the new ExoMars configuration despite the many unknowns about the NASA-ESA rover. Precise information on the roverโs cost and configuration, including the work distribution between ESA and NASA, will not be settled until October.
ESAโs Industrial Policy Committee, which approves the agencyโs expenditures, is scheduled to meet June 29-30 to approve a resumption of full ExoMars spending following a suspension of most work in April.
The work suspension was caused by NASAโs decision, announced in March, that it could no longer afford its own rover and would seek a single U.S.-European rover for the 2018 launch.
The Industrial Policy Committee had been expected to reopen the ExoMars financial spigot given the approval of the Human Spaceflight and Operations Directorate. Whether the financial go-ahead can occur without France is unclear.
ESA officials had wanted to approve continued funding of ExoMars as soon as July 1 because of what they said were tight deadlines for the industrial contracting team working on the 2016 mission.
ESAโs ExoMars prime contractor, Thales Alenia Space of France and Italy, had said it needed to begin full-scale construction on the 2016 mission, which features a Mars telecommunications relay orbiter, this summer without waiting for the end of negotiations on the 2018 rover.
In a June 21 interview here during the Paris air show, CNES President Yannick dโEscatha said CNESโs priority is the 2018 rover mission.
With the entire ExoMars mission budget capped by ESA governments at 1 billion euros ($1.4 billion), dโEscatha said CNES is worried that the monies allocated to the 2018 mission are insufficient to cover new costs associated with the NASA-ESA rover.
โOur concerns should not be taken as a critique of NASA,โ dโEscatha said. โThere is no single space agency anywhere that has not confronted unforeseen difficulties that force a change in plans. But this new element adds unknowns. We would like to be sure that, whatever they are, there is sufficient margin in the budget for the 2018 mission that we can deal with them.โ
With the missionโs budget firmly capped at 1 billion euros, any new money allocated to the 2018 rover must be taken from the 2016 orbiter. DโEscatha said that is fine with CNES.
โFor us, the clear priority is the 2018 mission,โ he said. โThe 2016 mission is there only to make possible the 2018 mission with the telecom relay. If the 2016 mission has to be de-scoped to better project 2018 given the current unknowns, then that is what we would propose.โ
In addition to its telecommunications relay function for 2018, the 2016 mission features a Mars Trace Gas Orbiter satellite to be provided by ESA, would hunt for methane sources in the Mars atmosphere. The mission also includes an ESA-provided entry, descent and landing demonstration package.
ESA Director-General Jean-Jacques Dordain said after the May 26-27 meeting of ESAโs Human Spaceflight and Operations Directorate that the agency had added money to the 2018 mission and protected its budget from any cost overruns on the 2016 mission.
DโEscatha said these measures still leave the 2018 mission open to cost overruns due to the redesigned NASA-ESA rover, about which very little will be known before this fall.
DโEscatha said he is skeptical that a couple of monthsโ review of the mission will pose a risk to the 2016 launch date. โThere are few missions of this type that cannot withstand a couple of monthsโ delay,โ he said. โIt just means we will need to work a little faster. As it was not possible to discuss our concerns at [the May 26-27 ESA meeting], because this subject was not on the agenda, we voted against it,โ he said, referring to the overall approval of the ExoMars mission.
It was not immediately clear whether the Industrial Policy Committee will be presented with an ExoMars spending proposal at the June 29-30 meeting given Franceโs position. The committee usually works on the basis of consensus.
In any event ExoMars, for which ESA so far has rounded up only 850 million euros of the budgeted 1 billion euros, cannot move forward without France unless another government agrees to take a correspondingly larger share of the work.
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