FYI: Science Policy News
FYI
/
Bill
116th Congress
NASA Authorization Act of 2020
Purpose
To authorize the programs of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and for other purposes.
Summary of Selected Provisions

Provisions in the House bill

  • Establishes a Moon to Mars program within NASA that includes the twin goals of conducting a crewed lunar landing by 2028 and a crewed mission to orbit Mars by 2033
  • Delineates between “critical enabling activities” deemed essential to Mars exploration and “noncritical path activities” that would fall outside the Moon to Mars program and be separately budgeted
  • Designates lunar in-situ resource utilization and the establishment of a continuously occupied lunar outpost or research station as noncritical path activities
  • Requires construction of a “Gateway to Mars” staging post but states it would “not be required for the conduct of human landing operations” on the Moon
  • Extends NASA support for the International Space Station through 2028
  • Requires NASA to plan for how it will maintain its communications infrastructure in orbit around Mars “into the 2040s”
  • Directs NASA to select a launch vehicle for the Europa Clipper Mission “taking into account the probability of mission success and based on cost, schedule, vehicle availability, and impact on science requirements”
  • Requires NASA to report quarterly to Congress on the progress of the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope with respect to a baseline cost and schedule estimate the agency will set

Provisions in the Senate bill

  • Directs NASA to follow a “steppingstone approach to exploration” that would set Mars exploration as an ultimate goal with a “timetable determined by the availability of funding”
  • Directs NASA to “establish sustainable lunar exploration by 2028"
  • Directs NASA to “establish an outpost in orbit around the Moon” that demonstrates Mars exploration technologies and functions as a staging post for missions to the lunar surface or other destinations
  • Extends NASA’s support for the International Space Station through 2030
  • Expresses support for the $3.2 billion cost cap Congress has previously established for the Wide Field Infrared Survey Telescope
  • Directs the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to determine how NASA or other agencies can best support “missions of national need” such as near-Earth object detection and orbital debris mitigation
Primary Sponsors
Co-sponsors by Party
R
2
D
1
I
0
Actions
  • 01/24/2020
    Introduced in House

Related Organizations