
#4
San Francisco Chronicle
October 16, 2002
Russia's decaying space program up in the air
Anna Badkhen, Chronicle Staff Writer
Moscow -- It was meant to be the next big thing,
a way for Russia to maintain its place as a leader in space.
But now Russia's role as a senior partner in the
16-nation, $100 billion international space station project is in doubt, as
officials here warn that the country can no longer maintain its financial
obligations to the project.
Russian space officials say that Moscow may have
to scale back its operations supporting the station because it has no money to
manufacture Soyuz vessels for manned space flights.
The United States pays most of the space
station's costs, but Russia, which has designed and built some of its key parts,
provides two Soyuz craft each year to take cosmonauts to the station and remain
as lifeboats for six months. Russia also provides five or six cargo ships a year
to deliver supplies to the station.
All this may end next year, said Valery Ryumin,
deputy general-director of the Energia space corporation and coordinator of
Russia's part of the space station program.
"We have no money for any trips to
space," Ryumin said. "It looks like we may have to cancel our part of
the international space station program."
Ryumin said the Russian government plans to
allocate only $38 million out of the $133 million Energia needs to build and
launch enough spacecraft next year. He said Energia would have to spend most of
this money to pay a $25 million debt it accumulated in previous years.
SPACE STATION SAFE
The United States signaled that the dearth of
funding for the Russian space program would not force astronauts to abandon the
ambitious project NASA heads.
"It has been in continuous operation with a
permanent presence for almost two years . . . and our full intention is we're
going to continue in that pattern as far as anybody can imagine," NASA
Administrator Sean O'Keefe said in Florida.
About Russia's cash shortage, O'Keefe said:
"Are they having financial difficulties? Clearly that's been signaled, and
it's something they're going to have to work through."
Being kicked out of the orbit because of lack of
money is the worst nightmare of Russia's disintegrating space program. With
doubts arising over Moscow's ability to maintain its end of the bargain in
keeping the international space station afloat, space experts wonder whether the
country will ever recover the leading role in space held by the Soviet Union.
When Russia finally pulled the plug on its aging
Mir spacecraft last year, space officials balked at giving up Russia's own
presence in space, which they saw as a ticket to cosmic prestige. Even as the
Kremlin decided to scrap the 15-year-old Mir, polls showed that more than 60
percent of Russians supported keeping the spaceship aloft.
Permanently underfunded and suffering from a
brain drain from their impoverished program, the Russians have sometimes missed
deadlines by years, and have sought novel ways to raise funds, including sending
space tourists to the international station for $20 million a pop.
Concerned that Russia wasn't able to meet its
commitment to the international project, U.S. officials persuaded Russia to let
Mir go last year.
At the time, the United States argued that the
international space station would guarantee Russia a high profile in orbit in
the future.
A BLEAK HORIZON
But as Moscow scrambles to fulfill its
obligation to the international project, Russian space experts wonder whether
the nation's space program has a future.
"One can't fly to space without any
money," said Georgi Grechko, one of Russia's most celebrated cosmonauts.
"Sorry to say, but I believe that our space program is dying."
To many in the West, the Russian space program
has a reputation of a beleaguered, cash-strapped wreck, best illustrated by
Hollywood films such as "Armageddon," which depicts a Russian
cosmonaut as an unshaven madman in a fur hat trying to fix his malfunctioning
spacecraft by pounding on it with a wrench.
But here, space officials still prefer to
remember how their once-proud program stunned the rest of the world.
Recently, Russian space veterans celebrated the
launch of the Soviet Union's first Sputnik 45 years ago. The news that a
186-pound artificial satellite was exchanging radio signals with Earth
humiliated and panicked Washington.
Even though the glory days of the Soviet space
program are over, Russians continue to draw on their country's enhanced status
because of its past triumphs in orbit.
Years after the demise of Russia's superpower
status as a space program, scientists across the country use Moscow's
participation in the space race as a selling point of the country's technical
know-how.
In marketing Russia's attractiveness to
potential foreign customers, Rossoft, an association of Russian computer
programming companies, said its computer scientists draw on the tradition that
kept Mir in orbit for many years longer than it was expected to circle the
Earth, and with fewer resources than their American counterparts.
But the way things are going, Russia's crippled
space program may never repeat these achievements again, said Energia's Ryumin.
"We may have to stop launching manned
spacecraft, and if we do, Russia's space program will be thrown back
decades," he said.
BACK TO THE TOP #227 CONTENTS NEXT ARTICLE
|