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- <text id=91TT2073>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: A Mission Close to Home
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SPACE, Page 53
- A Mission Close to Home
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Despite complaints about a $30 billion price tag, NASA launches a
- vital program to take the planet's pulse
- </p>
- <p>Jerome Cramer/Washington
- </p>
- <p> America's space program has spent billions of dollars and
- years of effort to produce detailed studies of the clouds of
- Venus and the craters of Mars. But in the future, NASA's
- researchers will need to pay closer attention to their home
- planet. As the earth's air, land and seas become ever more
- threatened by human overpopulation and industrial pollution,
- measuring the extent of the damage has become one of the most
- urgent missions of science.
- </p>
- <p> This week the space shuttle Discovery is scheduled to
- deploy the first satellite in the Mission to Planet Earth, an
- ambitious, long-range program to monitor the planet's pulse.
- This particular satellite carries four instruments to gather
- information about the atmosphere's vital ozone layer. The most
- important goal is to measure how badly this fragile band, which
- protects the earth from the harmful ultraviolet rays in
- sunlight, is being depleted by the industrial chemicals known
- as CFCs.
- </p>
- <p> Much more is on the drawing boards. During the next 15
- years, NASA hopes to spend $30 billion to $40 billion to launch
- satellites containing dozens of instruments for the Earth
- Observing System (EOS), the centerpiece of Mission to Planet
- Earth. They will study the impact of such forces as global
- warming, deforestation and desertification. NASA will also use
- satellites from other nations and ground monitors to develop a
- baseline of information against which global change can be
- measured.
- </p>
- <p> Despite its importance, the mission has not escaped
- criticism. When it was unveiled, detractors complained that,
- like the controversial space station Freedom, it could turn into
- a huge, unmanageable boondoggle. "NASA is obsessed with
- giantism," contends Robert Park, director of the Washington
- office of the American Physical Society. "They want to
- accomplish good, solid environmental science," he says, but have
- proposed to do it with complex, untested hardware. The mammoth
- price tag is also a concern. Richard Darman, head of the Office
- of Management and Budget, reportedly quipped, "I didn't know we
- needed a $30 billion thermometer."
- </p>
- <p> NASA's plan called not only for a series of small
- satellites but also for two large space platforms that would
- wind up holding the majority of the earth-sensing equipment.
- These could not be launched before the end of the decade.
- Scientists objected that locking many of the instruments aboard
- just two craft would make the program inflexible. If new
- discoveries were made during the mission, how could the
- platforms be redesigned to accommodate unplanned research?
- Moreover, a Hubble-like glitch or catastrophic accident could
- wipe out a major portion of the project. Says Tom Donahue, a
- University of Michigan professor of planetary science: "NASA
- didn't seem to realize that it was putting too many eggs into
- one basket."
- </p>
- <p> Another question is how to gather, store, translate and
- distribute the raw data developed during the project. NASA
- critics contend that the agency now has reams of information
- from space missions that no one ever examines, and the Earth
- Observing System could require major new storage facilities
- consuming about 60% of the mission's budget. "Creating a library
- is a huge task in itself," says Congressman Bob Traxler of
- Michigan, in whose district part of the library is to be built.
- </p>
- <p> In response to the criticisms, Congress and the White
- House have put pressure on NASA to improve its proposal, perhaps
- by launching six smaller space platforms instead of two large
- ones. Admits agency spokesman Gregory Wilson: "There is a lot
- of heat on NASA to accomplish EOS more quickly using smaller
- missions." NASA has set up an "engineering review panel" to
- study suggestions for the mission. It will release its report
- within the next few weeks, and NASA is expected to go along with
- any proposed changes. Says Edward Frieman, chairman of the
- panel: "We found ways to do it faster and make it more flexible,
- but not cheaper."
- </p>
- <p> Cheaper ways might be found if the project's budget were
- not partly the product of pork-barrel politics. For example,
- Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland will track and
- coordinate a large portion of the project. Maryland Senator
- Barbara Mikulski is chairman of the Senate Appropriations
- subcommittee handling NASA funding. Major contracts have been
- spread out among aerospace firms in the politically important
- states of California, Pennsylvania and New York. NASA has
- learned a lesson from the Pentagon: a program will fly
- politically if it involves a popular cause, promises to spread
- lots of money through key congressional districts and guarantees
- contracts to companies with strong lobbying clout in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> In this case, NASA appears to have picked a winner. The
- agency needs to refine its plans, but Congress will eventually
- come up with $30 billion or more, if that's what it takes.
- "It's a small price to pay to help save the planet," says John
- Logsdon, a space-policy expert at George Washington University.
- After the disasters with the shuttle program, the Hubble
- telescope and the Galileo probe to Jupiter, the Mission to
- Planet Earth gives NASA a chance to take a flight back to
- respectability.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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