NASA And Hawaii Partner For Space Exploration

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May 25, 2011

David E. Steitz Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1730 
david.steitz@xxxxxxxx 

Ruth Marlaire 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-4789 
ruth.marlaire@xxxxxxxx 

Donalyn Dela Cruz 
Office of the Governor, Honolulu 
808-586-0012 
donalyn.delacruz@xxxxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 11-168

NASA AND HAWAII PARTNER FOR SPACE EXPLORATION

WASHINGTON -- NASA and Hawaii have agreed to collaborate on a wide 
range of activities to promote America's human and robotic 
exploration of space. The partnership also will contribute to the 
development of education programs and foster economic opportunities 
including new, high-tech jobs. 

Hawaii Governor Neil Abercrombie and NASA Associate Deputy 
Administrator Rebecca Keiser signed a two-year non-reimbursable Space 
Act Agreement Annex during a ceremony today in Honolulu. The ceremony 
was held on the 50th anniversary of President John F. Kennedy's 
historic announcement committing the country to land an American on 
the moon and return him safely before the end of the decade. 

"Hawaii has been part of America's space activities from the beginning 
of the space program when Apollo astronauts trained in the islands 
for their historic missions to the moon," Abercrombie said. "This 
partnership with NASA will broaden educational and employment 
opportunities for our local families and bring dollars into our 
economy." 

The annex establishes a partnership between NASA's Ames Research 
Center at Moffett Field, Calif., and Hawaii to explore and test new 
technologies, capabilities and strategies supporting America's space 
exploration and development goals. 

Under the agreement, Hawaii is proposing to explore development of a 
ground-based international lunar effort. It would use the state's 
unique moon/Mars analog terrain to enable development and testing of 
advanced automated and tele-robotic vehicles. Researchers would 
benefit from Hawaii's natural geography to study in-situ resource 
use, advanced communications, power generation and other technologies 
required for exploration beyond low Earth orbit. 

"This type of participatory exploration is becoming an increasingly 
important component of the 21st century space program," Keiser said. 
"Americans want to participate directly and personally in space 
activities. As we have seen from NASA's Commercial Orbital 
Transportation Services project and the Centennial Challenges prize 
competitions, harvesting the country's innovative talent is important 
to the success of our future endeavors in space. The space frontier 
is opening in novel and exciting ways." 

Hawaii will provide the prototype test environment and infrastructure 
for the proposed analog test facilities. NASA will evaluate new 
concepts and models for conducting space exploration. Hawaii will 
explore the potential to develop and mature innovative space-related 
technologies for educational, industry and government use. 

"From NASA's perspective, this partnership can inspire ideas and 
applications from analog test sites that can be generalized to space 
exploration and development of the moon and other planetary bodies," 
said Ames Director Pete Worden. 

Hawaii's Office of Aerospace Development will be the lead state agency 
for the project, enhancing dialogue and coordination among the state, 
private and academic partners to enable growth and diversification of 
the state's aerospace economy. 

"We support NASA's goal to promote public-private partnerships and 
multinational alliances to help reduce the cost, enhance the 
feasibility and accelerate the implementation of future space 
missions - leading to settlements beyond low-Earth orbit," said Jim 
Crisafulli, director of Hawaii's Office of Aerospace Development. 
"Locally, this collaboration should catalyze Hawaii-based economic 
innovation and engage engineers, scientists, educators, and students, 
as well as commercial entrepreneurs, to increase the opportunities 
and benefits of space exploration." 

For more information about NASA Ames, visit: 


http://www.nasa.gov/ames 


For more information about Hawaii's aerospace initiatives, visit: 


http://aerospacehawaii.info   

	
-end-



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