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A "disaster waiting to happen"? Industry officials worry about Crew Dragon availability.

First publishedJul 13, 16:05 UTC
Last updatedJul 14, 00:33 UTC · 15m ago
11 outletArs Technica
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A "disaster waiting to happen"? Industry officials worry about Crew Dragon availability.
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NASA breathed a deep sigh of relief six years ago when SpaceX launched two astronauts, Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, on a successful mission to the International Space Station. With the safe landing of Crew Dragon, the US space agency broke a nearly decade-long gap in its ability to put humans into orbit.

Reported by 1 outlet Ars Technica. See all sources ↓

NASA breathed a deep sigh of relief six years ago when SpaceX launched two astronauts, Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, on a successful mission to the International Space Station. With the safe landing of Crew Dragon, the US space agency broke a nearly decade-long gap in its ability to put humans into orbit. Through its Commercial Crew program and multibillion-dollar contracts awarded in 2014, NASA had hoped to foster two providers of low-Earth orbit transportation, SpaceX and Boeing. However Boeing has yet to complete a successful crewed test flight—a perilous 2024 test flight by Boeing's Starliner was later declared a Type A mishap—and probably won't fly another crewed mission before 2028.

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In brief
What's the story?
NASA breathed a deep sigh of relief six years ago when SpaceX launched two astronauts, Doug Hurley and Bob Behnken, on a successful mission to the International Space Station. With the safe landing of Crew Dragon, the US space agency broke a nearly decade-long gap in its ability to put humans into orbit.
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1 outlet, average source rating 7.0/10.
When was it last updated?
15m ago.
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    A "disaster waiting to happen"? Industry officials worry about Crew Dragon availability.

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    Ars Technica
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