NASA Recommendations
- The President establish a permanent Space Exploration Steering Council, reporting to the President, with representatives of all appropriate federal agencies, and chaired by the Vice President or such other senior White House executive that the President may designate. The council shall be empowered to develop policies and coordinate work by its agencies to share technologies, facilities, and talent with NASA to support the national space exploration vision.
- NASA recognize and implement a far larger presence of private industry in space operations with the specific goal of allowing private industry to assume the primary role of providing services to NASA, and most immediately in accessing low-Earth orbit. In NASA decisions, the preferred choice for operational activities must be competitively awarded contracts with private and non-profit organizations and NASA's role must be limited to only those areas where there is irrefutable demonstration that only government can perform the proposed activity;
- NASA be transformed to become more focused and effectively integrated to implement the national space exploration vision, with a structure that affixes clear authority and accountability;
- NASA Centers be reconfigured as Federally Funded Research and Development Centers to enable innovation, to work effectively with the private sector, and to stimulate economic development. The Commission recognizes that certain specific functions should remain under federal management within a reconfigured Center;
- the Administration and Congress work with NASA to create 3 new NASA organizations:
1. a technical advisory board that would give the Administrator and NASA leadership independent and responsive advice on technology and risk mitigation plans;
2. an independent cost estimating organization to ensure cost realism and accuracy; and
3. a research and technology organization that sponsors high risk/high payoff technology advancement while tolerating periodic failures; and
- NASA adopt proven personnel and management reforms to implement the national space exploration vision, to include:
1. use of "system-of-systems" approach;
2. policies of spiral, evolutionary development;
3. reliance upon lead systems integrators; and
4. independent technical and cost assessments.
- NASA immediately form special project teams for each enabling technology to:
1. conduct initial assessments of these technologies;
2. develop a roadmap that leads to mature technologies;
3. integrate these technologies into the exploration architecture; and
4. develop a plan for transition of appropriate technologies to the private sector.
The long-term, ambitious space agenda advanced by the President for robotic and human exploration will significantly help the United States protect its technological leadership, economic vitality, and security.
- NASA aggressively use its contractual authority to reach broadly into the commercial and nonprofit communities to bring the best ideas, technologies, and management tools into the accomplishment of exploration goals; and
- Congress increase the potential for commercial opportunities related to the national space exploration vision by providing incentives for entrepreneurial investment in space, by creating significant monetary prizes for the accomplishment of space missions and/or technology developments and by assuring appropriate property rights for those who seek to develop space resources and infrastructure.
- NASA pursue international partnerships based upon an architecture that would encourage global investment in support of the vision.
- NASA seeks routine input from the scientific community on exploration architectures to ensure that maximum use is made of existing assets and emerging capabilities;
- NASA ask the National Academy of Sciences to engage the scientific community in a re-evaluation of priorities to exploit opportunities created by the space exploration vision. In particular, the community should consider how machines and humans, used separately and in combination, can maximize scientific returns; and
- a discovery-based criterion to select destinations beyond the Moon and Mars that also considers affordability, technical maturity, scientific importance, and emerging capabilities including access to in-situ space resources.
- The Space Exploration Steering Council work with America's education community and state and local political leaders to produce an action plan that leverages the exploration vision in support of the nation's commitment to improve math, science, and engineering education. The action plan should:
1. increase the priority on teacher training;
2. provide for better integration of existing math, science, and engineering education initiatives across governments, industries, and professional organizations; and
3. explore options to create a university-based "virtual space academy" for training the next generation technical work force.
- Industry, professional organizations, and the media engage the public in understanding why space exploration is vital to our scientific, economic, and security interests.
The Commission unanimously endorses this ambitious yet thoroughly achievable goal of space exploration. This will require a steady commitment from current and future Administrations, Congresses, and the American people. Reasonable risk must be accommodated, along with some failures. Our journey will require the government to embrace fundamental changes in its management and organization. This exploration vision must be discovery driven - and it must certainly necessitate placing greater reliance on the private sector. We should take advantage of this unique opportunity to inspire our youth, motivate our teachers and improve math, science, and engineering education for our future workforce. In fact, we must do all of these things to succeed.