Just a month before the end of Fiscal Year 2013 (September 30), Space
Policy Online has released the final resolution of NASA’s FY13 budget. The final budget figures were not released by
the government but were supplied following a request by Space Policy Online. The final figures for the Planetary Science
program still reflect a substantial cut from the previous year but are much
better than the proposed budget for FY13.
The FY13 budget approval was especially messy this year because
Congress failed to pass a final budget until last spring (around six months
late). The budget was then automatically
cut through a process known as the Sequester.
The Administration then reportedly proposed larger cuts to the planetary
program to spare other parts of the NASA budget the effects of the
Sequester. Congress reportedly rejected that
division of cuts, resulting in negotiations and the final budget supplied to
Space Policy Online.
News reports have also discussed other impacts – some potentially
serious – that may eventually result from the continuing cuts to NASA’s
Planetary Science budget. I summarize
these following the table of numbers.
Planetary Science Budgets
$1501.4M – FY12 approved
$1,192.3M – FY13 Administration proposed budget
$1,415.0M
– FY13 Congressionally approved budget, pre Sequester
$1196.0M
– FY13 reported
proposed Administration budget following Sequester
$1271.5M – FY13 final
budget per Space Policy Online post Sequester
In a nutshell, the final budget represents a substantial cut compared
to the previous year (FY12) and compared to what was approved by Congress. The final budget approximately splits the
difference between the Administration’s proposed budget and Congress’ approved
budgets.
The disagreement over the level of the Planetary Science budget looks
to continue for the next year, too. The Administration
requested $1,217.5M for FY14, while the House and Senate have approved $1,315.0M
and $1,317.6M, respectively for next year.
Space Policy Online does not provide any detail on spending within the
Planetary Science program. Important
details would be the level of funding for the Discovery and New Frontiers
programs, which would indicate when the selection of the next missions in the
programs could begin. We also don’t know
at what level studies of a future Europa mission are funded.
In the meantime, Space News has provided a steady trickle of the
effects of the declining Planetary Science budget over the last couple of
months:
The declining budgets may not support continued funding for both the
Cassini and Curiosity rover missions. Science
News July 18 (I
was afraid of this possibility when the FY14 budget proposal showed a
dramatic decline in outer planet funding following the completion of the
current phase of the Cassini mission. If
the Cassini mission were terminated early, we would lose the close in orbits –
just outside and then inside the rings – that essentially constitutes an
entirely new mission similar to the Juno mission at Jupiter. The key as to whether or not this tradeoff
must be made may lie with whether the future on-going budgets are closer to the
Administration’s ~$1,200M mark or Congress’ ~$1,300M mark.)
The start dates for the competitions to select the next Discovery and
New Frontiers missions are uncertain and won’t be known until the
Administration releases its FY15 budget around February 2014. Space
News July 16 (NASA cannot begin the
competitions until it knows whether or not it can plan on adequate funding to
implement the selected missions. It has to
base those projections on the projected budgets supplied with the
Administration’s annual budgets. If the
Administration continues to propose low budget numbers, the start of the
competitions may continue to be pushed out even if Congress increases the final
budget numbers for the current year.)
While the Administration’s budget proposals state that there is no plan
or funding for a future mission to Europa, Congressionally approved funds in
the FY13 budget allow early design and technology development efforts to
continue. Space
News July 22.
The grass roots lobbying by the Planetary Society is one of the reasons
that Congress continues to provide more money to the Planetary Science program
than is requested by the Administration.
Space
News August 26 (See this
post by Casey Drier on the inside story about how the lobbying is done.)
Hey Van....where are you bud...nothing in almost a month!! Need some info even if from guests!!
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