At an event on Friday, NASA laid out its plans for making the International Space Station a hub for commercial activity in low-Earth orbit. The agency has long planned to make the ISS a key anchor point for helping private business operate in space.
“We’re hear because the International Space Station is now open for business,” said NASA Lead Spokesperson Stephanie Schierholz at the conference outset. 20 companies joined NASA officials on stage to launch this new commercial ability to discuss the opportunities.
Part of the plan includes allowing private astronauts to visit and stay on the ISS, travelling on US vehicles. It also includes allowing private business activities to take place on the ISS, including “in-space manufacturing,” marketing activities, healthcare research “and more,” NASA says.
NASA articulated a five-part plan that it says “doesn’t conflict” with government and public sector use of the ISS, but that stands to allow creative and varied revenue-generating opportunities for private actors. NASA’s goal overall is to become “one of many” users of the ISS and low-Earth orbit facilities, they agency said, and this should lead to benefits for tax payers, too.
Here’s NASA’s five-part plan as described at a high level today:
- Part one – NASA created an International Space Station Commercial Use pPolicy. It provides an initial supply or quota of resources including crew time, and cargo launch and return capabilities for purchase by private companies.
- Part two – Private astronauts can visit for up to two short duration per year, beginning early as 2020). Missions will be privately funded, dedicated commercial space flight and will have to use US spacecraft (including those being certified by the NASA crew space travel program like SpaceX’s Crew Dragon). NASA will lay out pricing for use of life support, crew supply, storage and data.
- Part three – The forward part of ISS Node 2 Harmony module available for first element of commercial destination. They characterized this as an initial step towards future commercial habitable modules in space. There’s a request for proposals coming on June 14 and NASA will select a first customer to award the port’s development by end of this fiscal year.
- Part four – NASA is developing plan to stimulate long-term commercial demand, and it’s starting by studying space manufacturing and regenerative medicine in particular. The agency is asking for white papers by June 15 and proposals by July 28.
- Part five – NASA has new white paper that articulates the minimum viable needs for long-term commercial operations in long-term orbit.
Lowering price for commercial transit is incredibly important to this plan overall and that came up repeatedly, and it seems like this is mostly a call to private entities to help solve these and other problems to make sure that commercialization is not only available, but also viable. Another piece of the plan is that long-term, over the next decade or so, private entities investing in the ISS can potentially replace it with a privately run space station, which would help address its eventual end-of-life replacement plans.