It would be a major vote of no confidence.
Empty Nester
NASA astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams have been stranded in space since arriving at the International Space Station on June 6, just shy of two months ago.
Whether an empty return would seal Starliner’s fate remains to be seen. Boeing and NASA have already committed a whopping $6.7 billion to the project since 2010 and are unlikely to give up too easily.
Capsule Culture
Over the last two months, NASA has played down the extent of Boeing’s issues, with NASA commercial crew program manager Steve Stich arguing that the two astronauts were “not stranded” during a late June press conference.
Several of the capsule’s 28 thrusters failed during docking procedures in early June. While NASA has since claimed that all but one are in good working condition, we still don’t know the exact root cause.
The space agency and Boeing have painted their ongoing investigations as a way to collect more data, presumably to quell concerns.
But time is running out. Starliner’s batteries are only rated to stay in orbit through early September.
The agency is still “evaluating all options,” as Ars Technica reported last week, to get the two astronauts back.
“No decisions have been made and the agency will continue to provide updates on its planning,” a NASA spokesperson told Ars.
Considering Boeing has lost a whopping $1.6 billion on Starliner, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that NASA is still hemming and hawing before giving up.
But the company remains “confident in the Starliner spacecraft and its ability to return safely with crew,” a Boeing spokesperson told CNBC last week.
More on Starliner: It’s Sounding Like Boeing’s Starliner May Have Completely Failed