Updated
Updated · SpaceNews · May 24
NASA Adds 6 SpaceX ISS Crew Missions as Boeing Starliner Certification Delays Persist
Updated
Updated · SpaceNews · May 24

NASA Adds 6 SpaceX ISS Crew Missions as Boeing Starliner Certification Delays Persist

2 articles · Updated · SpaceNews · May 24
  • NASA said in a May 18 procurement filing it will sole-source six additional post-certification crew missions to SpaceX, with up to three ordered immediately to start preparations.
  • SpaceX is NASA’s only certified crew transport system for the ISS, and the agency cited Boeing Starliner’s technical problems, schedule slips and uncertain certification as reasons to expand the contract.
  • Six added flights would cover about three more years of ISS rotations at one mission every six months, extending U.S. crew access from the current Crew-14 plan in fall 2027 to late 2030.
  • NASA’s need for more flights also grew after it decided to keep ISS expeditions at six months rather than stretch them to eight, preserving a higher launch cadence in the station’s final years.
  • Boeing’s contract was cut in 2024 from six missions to four, including Starliner-1, which was expected this year but did not appear on NASA’s latest ISS crew-and-cargo manifest.
With SpaceX holding a monopoly on crew flights, is NASA’s vision for a competitive LEO market now in jeopardy?
Can Boeing's Starliner ever recover from its 'Type A mishap' to safely fly astronauts for NASA?