Thursday, June 5, 2014

Elon Musk Wants the Military to Let SpaceX Launch Satellites


Elon Musk
Elon Musk
There’s a custom in Washington that U.S. defense contractors don’t talk trash about their competitors, at least not in public. After fiercely competing for multibillion-dollar Pentagon contracts, the winner often placates the loser with a piece of the action. When Lockheed Martin (LMT) was awarded the contract to build the F-22 fighter jet, it hired Northrop Grumman (NOC) to build the plane’s radar. Boeing (BA) won the contract to build the Air Force’s KC-46 tanker plane and asked Northrop and Raytheon (RTN) to contribute key components. Everyone ends up happy. It’s how it’s always been done.
Elon Musk couldn’t care less how it’s always been done. The chief executive officer of the fledgling rocket maker Space Exploration Technologies—SpaceX for short—is seeking to break into the $68 billion Pentagon satellite launch market. But Musk, better known as the prickly, detail-obsessed CEO of his other company, Tesla Motors (TSLA), isn’t bothering with niceties to help ease his way into the club. Instead, in a series of visits to the capital this year, he’s blasted the defense establishment, saying he can build better rockets for less money than traditional aerospace companies and accusing the military of illegally shunning bids by outsiders—namely, him.
SpaceX, based in Hawthorne, Calif., has already shown itself to be a serious contender in space. In 2012 it became the first private company to dock an unmanned supply ship at the International Space Station. It’s one of several companies developing vehicles for NASA that are capable of transporting astronauts to the orbiting lab, with the goal of ending the U.S. reliance on Russia for those rides. In 2013, Musk won a battle with Jeff Bezos’s rocket company, Blue Origin, to lease an historic Kennedy Space Center launchpad in Florida. Yet the Pentagon hasn’t approved SpaceX for lucrative military work.
Which explains why Musk is becoming a familiar presence in D.C., where he and a small army of lobbyists are pressing SpaceX’s case—and taking shots at the competition. In March, Musk told members of Congress that the government should be wary of the exclusive contract for satellite rocket launches it awarded to United Launch Alliance (ULA), a joint venture of Lockheed and Boeing. He pointed out that ULA’s rockets use engines made in Russia. “In light of international events, this seems like the wrong time to send hundreds of millions of dollars to the Kremlin,” he told reporters at the National Press Club on April 25. Three days later, SpaceX sued the Air Force in federal court, accusing the service of creating a satellite launch monopoly.


Musk is aiming to force the Pentagon to reverse its contract with ULA to launch 36 military satellites. ULA says it costs about $225 million to put a satellite in space. SpaceX says its Falcon 9 rocket can do it for about $100 million per launch. “SpaceX is not saying that these launches should be awarded to us,” Musk said at the press club. “If we compete and lose, that’s fine, but why were they not even competed? That just doesn’t make sense.” ULA CEO Michael Gass says no company at any price can compete with its record of 68 successful launches in a row.
“Elon Musk is a genuine outsider,” says Loren Thompson, an analyst with the Lexington Institute, a defense research group, and a consultant to companies including Lockheed. “He is a disruptive influence who will probably change the way business is done in the space sector.”
The acrimony between SpaceX and the defense establishment intensified in May, amid the crisis in Ukraine, when Russia announced it would no longer export rocket engines to the U.S. for military launches, leaving ULA without an important supplier. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin also said his country will withdraw cooperation from the space station after 2020.
ULA says Russia’s announcement won’t affect the Pentagon contract because it has a two-year supply of engines on hand and one of the company’s two rocket designs doesn’t rely on the Russian manufacturer, NPO Energomash. Nonetheless, ULA all but blamed Musk’s public remarks for Russia’s decision to stop selling to the U.S. “It affirms that SpaceX’s irresponsible actions have created unnecessary distractions, threatened U.S. military satellite operations, and undermined our future relationship with the International Space Station,” spokeswoman Jessica Rye said in an e-mail. SpaceX spokesman John Taylor declined to comment on Musk’s relationship with rival corporations.

No comments: