Nasa delays next launch to buy more time at space station for troubled capsule

7 August 2024, 18:54

Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft (Nasa via AP)
Boeing-Astronaut-Launch. Picture: PA

Nasa is weighing all its options for returning the two veteran astronauts, including a ride home in a SpaceX capsule.

Nasa is delaying its next astronaut launch to buy more time at the International Space Station for Boeing’s troubled new crew capsule.

The space agency said Tuesday it is bumping SpaceX’s four-person flight from this month to next. It is now targeted for September 24 at the earliest.

Officials said that will give them more time to analyse thruster and leak problems that hit Boeing’s Starliner capsule after its June lift-off, its first with a crew on board.

Tuesday marked the two-month point at the space station for Starliner’s test pilots, Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams, who should have been back by mid-June.

Nasa is weighing all its options for returning the two veteran astronauts, including a ride home in a SpaceX capsule.

Astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore  (Nasa via AP)
Astronauts Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore (Nasa via AP)

“Nasa and Boeing continue to evaluate the spacecraft’s readiness, and no decisions have been made regarding Starliner’s return,” Nasa said in a statement.

Further details were expected at a news conference set for Wednesday.

Only two docking ports at the space station can accommodate US astronaut capsules and, right now, both are occupied. So one will need to be vacated before the next SpaceX crew can arrive. Russia has its own parking places for its Soyuz capsules.

The latest setback means the four astronauts who flew up with SpaceX in March now also face a longer mission than planned.

Over the past several weeks, Boeing has conducted thruster test firings on the ground as well as in space to better understand why five thrusters failed ahead of Starliner’s June 6 arrival at the space station. All but one came back online. Helium leaks in the capsule’s propulsion system also cropped up.

Citing the testing, the company late last week said: “Boeing remains confident in the Starliner spacecraft and its ability to return safely with crew.”

Boeing and SpaceX topped Nasa’s list for astronaut taxi service to and from the space station, after the shuttles retired in 2011.

Nasa signed contracts worth billions with both companies in order to have a back-up in case one of them got sidelined by an accident.

SpaceX launched its first crew in 2020; the upcoming flight will be its 10th astronaut flight for Nasa. It has also sent a few private crews into orbit.

Boeing has had to overcome multiple Starliner problems over the years. The company had to launch an empty Starliner twice before committing to a crew, repeating the initial flight test because of bad software and other issues.

The delays have cost the company more than one billion dollars.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

The SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket (Maxar)

Spacecraft to study Jupiter moon’s underground ocean cleared for October launch

Bruce Springsteen and his wife Patti Scialfa (Evan Agostini via Invision)

Patti Scialfa, Bruce Springsteen’s wife and bandmate, reveals cancer diagnosis

Kamala Harris and Donald Trump (AP Photo)

Trump signals support for reclassifying marijuana as a less dangerous drug

United Nations secretary-general Antonio Guterres (Kamran Jebreili/AP)

UN chief calls the death and destruction in Gaza the worst he has seen

Exclusive
Online retailer SHEIN is selling knives for as little as £1 - without age checks

School children buying knives from Chinese fast-fashion site SHEIN for as little as £1

Nancy Faeser speaks during a press conference in Berlin (Michael Kappeler/dpa via AP)

Germany expands controls at borders to stem migration and extremism risks

Houses are submerged in flood after typhoon Yagi hit Yen Bai province,

Vietnam storm death toll rises after bus swept away and bridge collapses

Aysenur Ezgi Eygi (Courtesy of the Eygi family/International Solidarity Movement via AP)

Mourners attend funeral for American activist ‘shot dead by Israeli troops’

Morgan Wallen

Morgan Wallen leads CMA award nominations as Beyonce misses out

Ukrainian air defence intercepts a Shahed drone mid-air during a Russian aerial attack on the capital in Kyiv, Ukraine

Iranian missiles in Russia are legitimate target, Ukrainian official says

Photo taken on Thursday September 5 of the young golden eagle that attacked a toddler in Norway in what an ornithologist says is likely the bird’s in the fourth such attack on humans in the past week

Golden eagle which attacked toddler in Norway ‘likely had behavioural disorder’

Dominique Pelicot has complained that his life has been ruined by the trial

Monster of Avignon accused of 'drugging and letting strangers rape wife' complains his life has been ruined by trial

Pope Francis hugs a child as East Timor President Jose Ramos-Horta sits with him during a welcoming ceremony upon their meeting at the Presidential Palace in Dili, East Timor

Pope cheers East Timor’s recovery while acknowledging bishop’s abuse scandal

An Olympic athlete has died after reportedly being ‘set on fire' by her boyfriend.

Olympic athlete Rebecca Cheptegei screamed ‘help me’ as attacker covered her in more petrol, horrified witness claims

Chinese and Russian warships taking part in joint naval drills in the East China Sea in December 2022

China announces joint naval and air drills with Russia

A pensioner allegedly tried to suffocate his wife with a pillow in their Paleo Faliro apartment

Brit, 87, arrested in Greece after 'trying to suffocate sick and bedridden wife with pillow'