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    NASA Scales Back Mars Exploration Strategy to Fit Budget

    NASA is fundamentally overhauling its Mars exploration strategy, ditching multibillion-dollar "flagship" missions in favor of cheaper, more efficient projects for now, agency officials announced Monday (Feb. 13).

    The decision is a response to diminished funding for robotic exploration going forward. In his federal budget request for next year, which was revealed Monday (Feb. 13), President Barack Obama allocated $1.2 billion to NASA's planetary science programs — a 20 percent cut from the current allotment of $1.5 billion, with further reductions expected over the next several years.

    The cut is spurring a shift in NASA thinking about the best way to study Mars in the near term. This shift compels the agency to withdraw from the European-led ExoMars missions, which aim to launch an orbiter and a drill-toting rover to the Red Planet in 2016 and 2018, respectively.

    "Instead, we will develop an integrated strategy to ensure that the next steps for Mars exploration will support science as well as human exploration goals, and potentially take advantage of the 2018-2020 exploration window," NASA chief Charlie Bolden told reporters. "The budget provides support for this new approach." [7 Biggest Mysteries of Mars]

    No more flagships, for now

    The new direction does not imperil NASA's $2.5 billion Mars Science Laboratory (MSL) mission, which will drop the 1-ton Curiosity rover onto the Martian surface this August to investigate if the Red Planet can, or ever did, support microbial life.

    Nor does it affect the $485 million MAVEN mission, due to launch in late 2013 to study Mars' upper atmosphere and gather information about how the Red Planet's climate has changed over time.

    However, NASA's new strategy acknowledges that the agency won't be launching ambitious, expensive "flagship" missions like MSL toward the Red Planet — or any other solar system body — anytime soon.

    "A flagship mission in not on the table," said John Grunsfeld, NASA's associate administrator for science. "We're looking at building a moderate mission, and it's a partnership looking at synergies between the requirements of human spaceflight, science and the needs to demonstrate technologies that advance other missions in the future."

    It makes sense to set up such partnerships, beyond simply spreading costs around the various branches of NASA, agency officials said. NASA has both science and exploration goals at Mars, after all; Obama has tasked the agency with getting humans to the Red Planet by the mid-2030s.

    Bolden said details of the new Mars strategy should be worked out in a matter of months. The goal is to be ready to launch a mission by 2018 and/or 2020, to take advantage of favorable alignments between Earth and the Red Planet.

    "We are looking at a basic mission for 2018," Grunsfeld said. "I'm not a betting person, but I'd certainly plan on it."

    He added that such a "basic mission" might cost somewhere between the $485 million MAVEN and NASA's $720 million Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which launched in 2005 and is still studying the Red Planet from above.

    Mars sample-return not dead?

    NASA's scaled-back Mars strategy puts on hold any plans for a sample-return mission, which would certainly fall in the "flagship" category.

    This is bad news for astrobiologists, many of whom believe that sending a piece of the Red Planet back to Earth for study is the best way to assess Mars' habitability, and to search for signs of Martian life.

    However, scientists shouldn't give up hopes for a sample-return effort, Grunsfeld said. He is optimistic that careful planning — and rosier budget outlooks in the future — will one day give researchers on Earth a chance to study Martian rocks and soil up close.

    "We're all folks who dream about science, dream about future science, dream about exploration, dream about Mars," Grunsfeld said. "I would certainly hope that, within 20 years, we have our first carefully selected samples of Mars back here near Earth or on Earth, in laboratories where we really can do the tough work to understand the climate conditions on past Mars, current Mars and the possibility that life might have existed there once."

    You can follow SPACE.com senior writer Mike Wall on Twitter: @michaeldwall. Follow SPACE.com for the latest in space science and exploration news on Twitter @Spacedotcom and on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    24 comments

    • jumpTooFast  •  Denver, United States  •  3 months ago
      Boys, please do a little research.
      More advances (ie. Computers and other devices) have come from military spending.
    • jumpTooFast  •  Denver, United States  •  3 months ago
      Dear joseph,
      You must be one of the dem/libs that pay no income taxes and receive transfer payments for being a non-producer, since you are not concerned about how the tax dollars stolen from those us that work are wasted.
      Also, your lib tactic of name-calling instead of presenting an argument disproving my statement verifies that you do not have an intellect response.
      Name some things that man did in space that could not have been accomplished by unmanned probes.
    • Drew  •  San Diego, United States  •  3 months ago
      We are fools! An article about space exploration, and 99% of the comments are about politics. Wonder why we don't have a space program? It's not because of other countries, nor is it a matter of money. We suck because (1) we don't work together as a nation anymore and (2) we no longer support science in education.
    • Bill  •  3 months ago
      Carl Sagan and Gene Roddenberry must be spinning in their graves.
      • Drew 3 months ago
        Graves? How quaint. I don't know about Carl but Gene was cremated and some of his ashes are in space.
      • Bill 3 months ago
        Carl Sagan was buried in Ithaca, NY and only a small part of Gene's ashes were sent into orbit (and burned up upon re-entering the atmosphere). Google can be your friend, Drew.
    • Joseph  •  3 months ago
      And now you know why Greese doesnt have a space program. Entitlement states cant afford anything except giving free money to free loaders. Since Bill Clintons administration. This country has become a joke. We used to stand for something. We used to be the leader of the free world. Now we are just another failing country that will be bankrupt by its inept politicians and greedy mega coporations.
      • Drew 3 months ago
        Actually, Greece is part of the ESA and has a satellite, HellasSat. So it's wrong to say it has no space program.
    • Norm  •  3 months ago
      We have entrusted uninformed people to make paramount decisions about the most important aspects of our nation's future. At the current pace, we will have the bottom 1% of our students designing Lego toy spacecraft and robotics so they can feel good about themselves. Watch out JPL, they will be managing your future in no time.
    • Kman  •  3 months ago
      Thanks USA , you've outgrown your usefulness. Now China, Russia, India and Japan can leap ahead in space, science and robotics!
    • CLT  •  Little Rock, United States  •  3 months ago
      Stop cutting the Space program!!!! Maybe we quit blowing money on wars we should have never been in, and highways that don't really need fixed, then maybe humans can actually do something good to put in the history books!
    • Dave  •  Salem, United States  •  3 months ago
      Considering the returns from the Space Program in jobs, science and inventions pusued by the civilian market (computers, cell phones, GPS's and on and on) the federal government is being extremely short sighted and cavalier about our future.
      • Mike P 3 months ago
        Agreed. Not only the loss in the civilian uses, but the loss on the society in general. Such as roll models for our youth. I'm 29 and I can tell you who Chuck Yeager, John Glenn and Neil Armstrong are. But if you ask young people who these people are and they have no clue. A solid Space Program with a realistic time tables for missions and set goals can also get our nations youth wanting to learn more about math and science.
    • serious  •  Lexington, United States  •  3 months ago
      the exploration of space, and the truth about other life only brings people together and takes a smart mind to understand. war and weapons are big money, divide the world and cause hate...so ya...no need for NASA
    • EricM  •  Kennesaw, United States  •  3 months ago
      Stop cutting military and space spending. If our military is strong like in the mid 80s we would never have to fight wars. Countries would know better than to screw with us. Cutting money to NASA just slows technology growth and further enables Obama's plan to knock us down to third world status. Great job Obama, just keep that chip on your shoulder and run our country into the ground. I miss the times where we took chances and went to the moon and beat the odds. Now odds are we won't make it because we won't take the risks. High risks equals high reward, but not the type of risk that Obama puts us in. We are doomed with him in there another 4 years.
      • Kirstin 3 months ago
        Don't pin all the blame on Obama. Or on the Democrats. It's bipartisan; they've all been cutting. And there is a very real chance that Congress will cut the budget back even further.
      • Drew 3 months ago
        Blame the wars: where do you think all the money went? Face it - we could've gone to Mars, we chose to go to Baghdad instead.
    • Mike P  •  Chicago, United States  •  3 months ago
      Epic fail NASA.... Epic fail.
      • Kirstin 3 months ago
        No, they didn't pick this course. It is being forced upon them.
      • Kirstin 3 months ago
        But I agree it's an epic fail.
    • jumpTooFast  •  Denver, United States  •  3 months ago
      European-led ExoMars Missions???
      I am sure Europe is contributing
    • GBC  •  3 months ago
      If you consider the very long term, it doesnt matter much that our species closely studies Mars next year or next century. The longer we put it off, the better our technology becomes, and the more efficiently it can be done.

      But in my own selfish interest, I'd prefer to see it happen in my life.
    • not as think as you drunk ...  •  3 months ago
      Congress doesn't run on a budget, they haven't passed one in years.
      Why should NASA be held to a higher standard?
    • True  •  Brunswick, United States  •  3 months ago
      nasa has no more value other than to waste money---it must be shut down
    • jumpTooFast  •  Denver, United States  •  3 months ago
      Actually, Roddenberry had it right. Just write a story and make a movie.
      Manned space flight is a totally waste of funds.
    • Marco S  •  3 months ago
      "No Mars for you!" -- the Mars Nazi
    • MATT  •  3 months ago
      geez thanks NASA, a little late though....
    • idontcare  •  3 months ago
      NASA is incapable of human launch forever. Russia won the space race!
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