Boeing, Lockheed Martin Consider Selling Space Launch Business

1srelluc

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Nov 21, 2021
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As NASA brass debate the future of its crew capsule, Boeing is said to be trying to get out of the space launch business.

Reuters is reporting that Boeing and Lockheed Martin, who jointly operate United Launch Alliance, are in talks to sell their rocket business to Sierra Space, a subsidiary of Sierra Nevada Corporation, an increasingly influential defense contractor that recently landed a $13 billion deal to build the federal government's new Survivable Airborne Operations System based on five used Boeing 747-8s.

The talks about the rocket business are in their early stages, and ULA has previously tried to unload it without success. The company competes with SpaceX to launch government payloads into orbit.

Reuters said the company should bring in between $2 billion-$3 billion and could fit Sierra Nevada's plan to bring its Dream Chaser space plane to market and service the space station it's planning to build in partnership with Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin.

LOL.....

For sale:

One broke spacecraft.

Ran when parked, currently disabled.

Like new, has never completed a mission. Buyer must retrieve vehicle from its current location. Bring trailer.

No lowball offers, we know what we got!
 
As NASA brass debate the future of its crew capsule, Boeing is said to be trying to get out of the space launch business.

Reuters is reporting that Boeing and Lockheed Martin, who jointly operate United Launch Alliance, are in talks to sell their rocket business to Sierra Space, a subsidiary of Sierra Nevada Corporation, an increasingly influential defense contractor that recently landed a $13 billion deal to build the federal government's new Survivable Airborne Operations System based on five used Boeing 747-8s.

The talks about the rocket business are in their early stages, and ULA has previously tried to unload it without success. The company competes with SpaceX to launch government payloads into orbit.

Reuters said the company should bring in between $2 billion-$3 billion and could fit Sierra Nevada's plan to bring its Dream Chaser space plane to market and service the space station it's planning to build in partnership with Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin.

LOL.....

For sale:

One broke spacecraft.

Ran when parked, currently disabled.

Like new, has never completed a mission. Buyer must retrieve vehicle from its current location. Bring trailer.

No lowball offers, we know what we got!
Buying critical components form the lowest bidder rarely works out well.
 

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