Boeing Warns of Hundreds of Layoffs With NASAs Moon Rocket in Limbo
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By Passant Rabie Published February 10, 2025 | Comments (0) | NASAs SLS rocket fitted with the Orion spacecraft ahead of the Artemis 1 launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. NASA/Joel Kowsky Boeing informed its Space Launch System (SLS) team of potential layoffs, a worrying sign that NASAs Moon rocket may be at risk after massive cost overruns and schedule delays. And also Trump. The company is expecting approximately 400 fewer positions by April 2025 to align with revisions to the Artemis program and cost expectations, Boeing told Gizmodo in an email. We are working with our customer and seeking opportunities to redeploy employees across our company to minimize job losses and retain our talented teammates. The 5.75-million-pound SLS rocket, powered by a Boeing-built core stage, is essential to NASAs Artemis Moon program. SLS launched on November 16, 2022 for the Artemis 1 mission, sending an uncrewed Orion spacecraft around the Moon and back. The rocket is due to launch a follow-up mission, Artemis 2, in April 2026, with a crew on board Orion, and the first crewed Moon landing since Apollo, Artemis 3, sometime in 2027. NASAs massive Moon rocket, however, has become a budgeting nightmare. NASAs Office of the Inspector General (OIG) performed an audit from February 2022 through April 2023, finding that the space agencys overall investment in its Artemis Moon program is projected to reach $93 billion from 2012 through 2025, of which the costs of SLS alone represent $23.8 billion spent through 2022. Thats $6 billion in cost increases for the rocket, in addition to six years in schedule delays above NASAs original projections, the report stated. Another OIG report released in August 2024 criticized Boeings ineffective quality management and inexperienced workforce, continued cost increases and schedule delays, and the delayed establishment of a cost and schedule baseline, regarding the SLS rockets Exploration Upper Stage. The upper stage was scheduled to be delivered to NASA in early 2021 but its development is now projected to be complete no earlier than 2027.The current administration does not seem to be a fan of the Artemis program either. The Artemis architecture is extremely inefficient, as it is a jobs-maximizing program, not a results-maximizing program, SpaceX CEO and founder Elon Musk, who is a close advisor to President Donald Trump, recently wrote on X. Something entirely new is needed. During his inauguration speech, Trump didnt mention the Moon, but instead spoke of launching American astronauts to plant the Stars and Stripes on the planet Mars. Musk also has his eyes on Mars, hoping to land SpaceXs megarocket Starship on the surface of the Red Planet by 2026. That would put Starship years ahead of NASAs plan to use the Moon as a testbed for landing astronauts on Mars sometime in the 2030s.Depending on where you stand on SLS, Boeings potential layoffs are either a worrying or welcome sign of where NASAs massive rocket stands after just one trip to the Moon.Daily NewsletterYou May Also Like By Passant Rabie Published February 8, 2025 By Isaac Schultz Published February 8, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published February 7, 2025 By Margherita Bassi Published February 7, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published February 6, 2025 By Passant Rabie Published February 6, 2025
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