Elon Musk Agrees SpaceX Would Have Received More Attention Had It Faced A Crisis Like Boeing With Starliner Spacecraft

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk agreed with X users who alleged that an issue with his company’s launch vehicle would gain more media attention than Boeing Co.’s Starliner crisis has been receiving.

What Happened: “True,” Musk wrote on X in response to an X user and Tesla shareholder who claimed that Musk’s SpaceX would have made headlines “every day” had it undergone a crisis similar to what Boeing is experiencing with its Starliner spacecraft.

Boeing launched its Starliner with astronauts Sunita Williams and Butch Wilmore to the international space station (ISS) on June 5. Though the two were supposed to return in about eight days, technical issues identified with the spacecraft while docking delayed the return journey. NASA and Boeing are currently evaluating the spacecraft’s reliability for the return flight.

NASA's Commercial Crew Program manager Steve Stich said last week that while the agency is considering returning the astronauts aboard the Starliner itself, it is also considering other options, including using SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft.

The ISS has only two docking ports and the Starliner and Crew 8 spacecraft are already docked to it. Earlier this week, NASA delayed the Crew-9 mission by a month to no earlier than Sept. 24 in a bid to give Boeing Starliner mission managers time to confirm its return to Earth.

Starliner has to undock first from the ISS to free up the port before the Crew-9 mission launches. One of the options that NASA is considering now is to undock the Starliner without a crew and then launch Crew-9 with just 2 astronauts aboard the Dragon spacecraft instead of four.

The Dragon spacecraft will then return in February 2025 with Wilmore, Williams, and the two Crew-9 astronauts. The plans are tentative, Stich said while adding that a final decision will be made mid-August. The official, however, did not provide a specific date for the final decision announcement.

Why It Matters: Boeing's Starliner spacecraft has been marred by several delays since the start. The spacecraft was supposed to have its first uncrewed test flight in 2015 which was delayed up to 2019. The spacecraft then failed to achieve its intended orbit. In 2022, the spacecraft completed its first successful uncrewed flight to the International Space Station.

NASA awarded both Boeing and SpaceX contracts to enable transportation to and from the ISS after retiring its space shuttle. SpaceX sent its first crewed mission to the ISS in 2020 on its Dragon spacecraft and has since then undertaken multiple missions, overtaking its traditional rival.

Late last month, Musk alleged that Boeing is awarded government contracts in the space segment owing to their "armies of lobbyists" despite safety concerns around its commercial plane segment.

Musk also pegged the delay in Starliner’s first crewed flight on "too many non-technical managers" at the company.

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