NASA inspector general gives
damning assessment of Boeing's quality control
Denise Chow
Fri,
August 9, 2024 at 4:04 AM GMT+2·4 min read
The Core Stage for NASA's Space Launch System rocket
is moved from a barge to the vehicle assembly building on July 23.
Ongoing issues with Boeing’s Starliner spaceship have
been front and center this summer, but a new government report highlights other
shortcomings of the company's aerospace work.
The
report, released Thursday by NASA’s Office of Inspector
General, calls into question Boeing’s standards and quality
control for its part in NASA’s efforts to return astronauts to the moon.
In
NASA's development of its next-generation megarocket, known as the Space Launch System, it gave Boeing the
contract to build the rocket system’s powerful upper stage.
But
according to the report, Boeing’s quality control systems fall short of NASA’s
requirements, and some known deficiencies have gone unaddressed. What's more,
the workers on the project are not, as a whole, sufficiently experienced or
well trained, according to the inspector general.
The
report brings additional scrutiny to Boeing, which is already dealing with
problems plaguing the first crewed flight of its Starliner capsule.
That
mission was meant to be the final step before Boeing could begin routine
flights to the International Space Station for NASA. But a helium leak and
issues with the Starliner’s thrusters have left the two NASA astronauts who
flew the capsule into space stuck in orbit for more than two months. The journey
had been meant to last just eight days.
Meanwhile,
Boeing's aviation arm continues to deal with fallout after a door panel blew out on one of its 737 Max airplanes in January.
Now,
the report from NASA's inspector general has found that the second stage of the
Space Launch System — the part Boeing is responsible for — is significantly
over budget. It blew through an original estimate of $962 million in 2017, and
the projected price tag for the work through 2025 is now $2.8 billion.
The
project is also years behind schedule: Boeing pushed back delivery of the
rocket stage from February 2021 to April 2027.
As
for Boeing's quality control practices, the NASA inspector general said that
from 2021 to 2023, federal oversight officers issued 71 “Corrective Action
Requests” to address “deficiencies in quality.”
Many
of the requests took aim at Boeing’s work at NASA’s Michoud Assembly Facility
in Louisiana.
“Quality
control issues at Michoud are largely due to the lack of a sufficient number of
trained and experienced aerospace workers at Boeing,” the report said.
NASA's Space Launch System rocket carrying the Orion spacecraft launches on the Artemis I flight test on Nov. 16, 2022.
Many
of the identified deficiencies ultimately did not get fixed, the report added.
“Boeing’s
process to address deficiencies to date has been ineffective, and the company
has generally been nonresponsive in taking corrective actions when the same
quality control issues reoccur,” it said.
In
response to a request for comment, a Boeing representative directed NBC News
back to NASA.
Catherine
Koerner, the associate administrator for the Exploration Systems Development
Mission Directorate at NASA headquarters, said in a written response attached
to the report that the agency holds its programs to the “highest technical and
programmatic standard.”
“NASA
is dedicated to ensuring that its workforce and associated contractors are
qualified and properly trained to ensure the safety of its missions,” Koerner
wrote.
The
report included several recommendations, including levying “financial penalties
for Boeing’s noncompliance with quality control standards.” The inspector
general said, however, that NASA decided not to introduce any kind of financial
discipline.
The
322-foot-tall Space Launch System and its accompanying Orion spacecraft are
designed to launch astronauts to the moon. The eventual goal is to build a base
on the lunar surface.
NASA
completed an uncrewed test flight of the Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule in
2022, a mission dubbed Artemis I. It is expected to launch four astronauts on
the system’s first crewed flight around the moon (the
Artemis II mission) next year.
In
addition to the first-generation SLS rocket, NASA is also developing a more
powerful model that can haul more cargo to the moon. Boeing is the prime
contractor for the upper stage of that upgraded version, known as the Space
Launch System Block 1B. It began the work in 2014.
The
initial plan called for the upgraded rocket system to be used to send the
Artemis II astronauts around the moon, but the timeline has been pushed back —
changes that led to delays in the development schedule and increased costs, according
to the inspector general.
The
new report said the SLS Block 1B version is likely to cost $5.7 billion by the
time it launches.
The
assessment is the latest setback for NASA's return-to-the-moon program, which
has been beset by holdups and budget overruns. NASA has spent more than $42
billion over more than a decade on its Space Launch System and Orion
spacecraft.
Last
year, NASA’s inspector general estimated that each Artemis launch would cost
$4.2 billion.
This
article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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