Spacecraft contractors face showdown
NEW YORK (Reuters) -- Price, rather than design or technology, may decide which top U.S. aerospace companies will win a contract to build a replacement for the space shuttle, an executive at Lockheed Martin Corp. said Monday.
NASA Monday laid out its most detailed vision yet for what would be a capsule-like vehicle that would rocket astronauts back to the moon by 2018, setting the stage for a showdown between Lockheed and an alliance of Boeing Co. Northrop Grumman Corp.
The space agency's definition of the spacecraft's design means the competition will focus on who can assemble the system's various components for cheaper, said Mike Coats, Lockheed's vice president and deputy for space exploration.
"What they've said is 'we want a simple reliable capsule like Apollo and Soyuz, so you go tell us how cheaply you can build it,"' he said in an interview, adding that could squeeze margins on contracts that could be worth up to $15 billion.
Both bidders have been preparing plans for months, but are still awaiting final guidelines from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration on how soon it wants them to deliver the new spacecraft and other details....
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/space/09/20/nasa.moon.contractors.reut/index.html