NASA, NRO, USAF Establish Strategy for Certifying New Expendable Launch Vehicles

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Oct. 14, 2011

Joshua Buck 
Headquarters, Washington      
202-358-1100 
jbuck@xxxxxxxx 

Loretta DeSio 
National Reconnaissance Office 
703-808-2655 
DeSioLor@xxxxxxx 

Tracy A. Bunko 
United States Air Force 
703-571-2777 
tracy.bunko@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx  


RELEASE: 11-348

NASA, NRO, USAF ESTABLISH STRATEGY FOR CERTIFYING NEW EXPENDABLE LAUNCH VEHICLES

WASHINGTON -- NASA, the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) and the 
U.S. Air Force signed an agreement this week to establish clear 
criteria for certification of commercial providers of launch vehicles 
used for national security space and civil space missions. 

The U.S. government is committed to procuring commercial launch 
services for its satellite and robotic missions, including Evolved 
Expendable Launch Vehicle, or EELV, launches. The new entrant launch 
vehicle certification strategy is the latest step in a cooperative 
effort by the Air Force, NASA and NRO to take advantage of new launch 
capability for the three agencies' missions. 

The agencies previously signed a Letter of Intent in October 2010, 
signaling their collaboration on launch requirements. A memorandum of 
understanding was signed in March, outlining their plans for future 
EELV-class launch vehicle acquisition, including the need for a 
coordinated strategy for certification of new entrant launch systems. 


The basis of the new strategy comes from NASA's existing policy 
directive for launch vehicle risk mitigation. It also recognizes that 
mission-unique requirements from each of the three agencies may 
result in different certification approaches to mitigate launch risk. 
The document provides a common framework and language among the 
agencies for communicating expectations to new launch service 
providers. 

The risk-based certification framework allows the agencies to consider 
both the cost and risk tolerance of the payload and their confidence 
in the launch vehicle. For payloads with higher risk tolerance, the 
agencies may consider use of launch vehicles with a higher risk 
category rating and provide an opportunity for new commercial 
providers to gain experience launching government payloads. 

Within a given risk category rating, if new entrants have launch 
vehicles with a demonstrated successful flight history, then the 
government may require less technical evaluation for non-recurring 
certification of the new launch system. This new strategy further 
enables competition from emerging, commercially developed launch 
capabilities for future Air Force, NASA, and NRO missions. 



http://www.nasa.gov   

	
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