Dec 6 2002
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(New page: The five partner space agencies of the ISS~ the Canadian Space Agency, ESA, NASA, Japan's NASDA, and the Russian Space Agency~ approved the 2002...)
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The five partner space agencies of the ISS~ the Canadian Space Agency, ESA, NASA, Japan's NASDA, and the Russian Space Agency~ approved the 2002 Program Action Plan for the ISS at a meeting held in Tokyo, Japan. The partner agencies agreed to expand the station's capabilities, to increase the number of permanent ISS crew members, and to provide additional crew rescue vehicles. They also agreed to a process for selecting an ISS configuration, once the ISS had accommodated the remaining components. In this process, each of the station's partner agencies would make additional programmatic and technical assessments, cost estimations, and internal budget reviews. In addition, the agencies announced that they would approve a station configuration option by March 2003, select a revised configuration by June or July 2003, and agree upon a final configuration by December 2003. (NASA, “Space Station Action Plan Approved,” news release 02-241, 6 December 2002.)
NASA announced the selection of Boeing's Delta 2 expendable launch vehicle to launch medium-class payloads between 2006 and 2009. The selection was part of an existing NASA launch-services contract with Boeing that had a maximum value of US$1.2 billion, if NASA exercised all options. The procurement contract called for 12 definite launches, with options for an additional seven. Boeing's rockets would launch both NASA's payloads and NASA-sponsored payloads. (NASA, “NASA Picks Delta II To Launch Medium-Class Payloads,” news release C02-ii, 6 December 2002.)
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