SpaceX's Falcon Heavy seen as cheaper alternative to SLS
13/2/2025 6:08
President Donald Trump is being urged to axe an over-budget,
multi-billion dollar moon rocket, sources familiar with the
discussions said, setting up a titanic struggle with Republican
lawmakers whose districts depend on the program's jobs.
Six space industry representatives advising Elon Musk, the
billionaire SpaceX CEO with a tight grip on U.S. space policy,
and Trump have told Reuters they want NASA's $24 billion Space
Launch System (SLS) program canceled or at least phased out over
several years, eyeing what has long been a major cost burden on
the agency - but a crucial pillar of its moon program.
Scaling back the SLS, which is being developed by Boeing
and Northrop Grumman, could offer a boost to
Musk's SpaceX, which is developing its own cheaper, albeit less
powerful rocket called Falcon Heavy.
Employing 28,000 workers across roughly 44 U.S. states, SLS,
which launched for the first time in 2022 after years of
development delays, is one of a few space programs Musk and
Trump's pick to head NASA, Jared Isaacman, have criticized as an
overpriced vestige of outdated rocket technology. Musk has said
SLS "makes me feel sad."
Cancelling SLS could be a major litmus test for Trump and
Musk's effort to streamline government, an effort being
spearheaded by the Musk-led Department of Government Efficiency.
DOGE representatives have entered NASA headquarters in
Washington and are examining its contracts, two sources said.
If SLS ends up on the chopping block, Musk will struggle to
overcome political hurdles, since cancelling large projects has
ripple effects across other areas of the federal bureaucracy
including widespread job cuts.
SLS, whose workforce is most concentrated in the Republican
strongholds of Alabama and Texas, is a prime example.
Republican Senator Tommy Tuberville from Alabama, whose
state is home to 14,000 SLS jobs, defended the program and
played down cancellation threats.
"The SLS will be fine," Tuberville said. "I know that
there's a lot - because of Elon Musk involved in the DOGE
situation - there's a lot of rumors out there on that, but I got
full confidence on the SLS and the future for them."
Republican Representative Dale Strong, whose Alabama
district includes NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, the
epicenter of the SLS workforce, told Reuters that it was not the
time to reassess SLS, saying: "You look what it's doing for
national security, I don't think now is the time to check up” on
it.
Boeing and Northrop Grumman are NASA's top two contractors
building SLS. Delays and roughly $24 billion in development
costs since 2012 have fueled arguments for its retirement. Each
launch could cost between $2 billion to $4 billion, while less
powerful but newer alternatives, such as SpaceX's Falcon Heavy,
have a price tag of around $250 million for each launch.
Strong said he wants the program to be cost effective and
believes competition from a private company like SpaceX would be
healthy.
Boeing declined to comment and Northrop did not immediately
respond to a request for comment.
NASA has struggled to cut costs with SLS and create a plan
to make it more competitive with commercial rockets. SpaceX and
Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin are introducing newer rockets that are
reusable and far cheaper, but less powerful.
Musk noted, for example, in a January 2020 post on his
social media platform X: "Fundamental issue with SLS is that
it's not reusable, which means that a billion dollar rocket is
blown up every launch!" SpaceX's rockets can be used more than
once.
Isaacman has called SLS "outrageously expensive."
But SLS backers argue that, despite its dismal development
history, SLS is the only rocket designed for a modern moon
mission that has proved capable of successfully flying, and its
cancellation would upend NASA's race with China, whose own moon
landing target of 2030 has pressured the U.S. to keep its moon
program on track.
Texas Representative Brian Babin, the Republican chairman of
a space committee that oversees NASA, said this week: "If we're
going to get to the moon before the Chinese, Space Launch System
is going to have to be what gets us there.”
Bill Nelson, a former senator from Florida and NASA's former
administrator, said SLS will not be canceled in the next four
years.
"I suspect that President Trump would like to be the
president when we land on the moon after a half century, with
five or six billion people watching," Nelson said.
Recent advances in SpaceX's development of Starship, which
is reusable and expected to be far cheaper than current rockets,
have galvanized the anti-SLS critics, arguing Musk's rocket can
effectively do the same tasks at a fraction of the price.
But SLS supporters say that, unlike Musk's Starship, it has
already flown successfully in its operational form and that its
power to lift heavy objects into space in a single launch is
greater than the multiple launches required by a reusable
Starship to carry similar weight.
"You'd be giving up the world's only capability to get
astronauts to the moon, which would be a definite disruption to
U.S. leadership in space," said Tom Culligan, the former top
lobbyist at Boeing's space unit.
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