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Starliner Capsule Returns, but Boeing’s Space Business Woes Remain

Business|Starliner’s Troubles Are Latest Setback for Boeing’s Space Business

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/09/07/business/boeing-starliner-nasa-spacex.html

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The capsule, which returned without astronauts, and other space programs at Boeing have suffered many delays and cost overruns.

A white space capsule with the NASA logo floats outside a window with the cloud-streaked Earth behind it.
The June trip of Boeing’s Starliner to the International Space Station was supposed to be the final step in certifying that the capsule was ready to make the voyage annually.Credit...NASA, via Associated Press

Niraj Chokshi

Sept. 7, 2024Updated 12:21 p.m. ET

Space programs are a small part of Boeing’s business, which is dominated by sales of commercial and military planes and equipment. But the work is a point of pride: Boeing has long been involved in spaceflight, going back to the first mission to take an American to space.

But Boeing’s efforts to add to that space heritage are in doubt.

The company’s Starliner capsule returned to Earth safely from the International Space Station on Friday night, but without the two astronauts it took up there in June because NASA was concerned about thrusters on the capsule that had malfunctioned before it docked at the station.

A decade ago, NASA chose Boeing and an upstart rival, SpaceX, to ferry astronauts to and from the space station. SpaceX has since carried out seven of those missions and will bring home the astronauts Starliner left behind, while Boeing has yet to complete one. And with the station set to retire as soon as 2030, time is running out.

“It’s unclear if or when the company will have another opportunity to bring astronauts to space,” Ron Epstein, an aerospace and defense analyst at Bank of America, said in a research note last month. “We would not be surprised if Boeing were to divest the manned spaceflight business.”

On Thursday, asked to comment on Starliner’s problems and the future of its space business, Boeing responded with this statement: “Boeing continues to focus, first and foremost, on the safety of the crew and spacecraft. We are executing the mission as determined by NASA, and we are preparing the spacecraft for a safe and successful uncrewed return.”

Boeing’s troubles could be a setback not only for the company but for the U.S. space program more broadly, which wants multiple private companies available to ably support its efforts.


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