Planetary Radio: Space Exploration, Astronomy and Science - Space Policy Edition: NASA’s 2026 budget
Episode Date: June 27, 2025Alicia Brown from the Commercial Space Federation and Brittany Webster from the American Geophysical Union join the show to discuss NASA’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal, which aims to slash t...he agency’s funding by nearly 25%, cut science by 47%, and reduce staffing to levels not seen since 1960. Discover more at: https://www.planetary.org/planetary-radio/fy2026-nasa-budget-discussionSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi and welcome to this month's Space Policy edition of Planetary Radio. I am Casey Dreier, the Chief of Space Policy here at the Planetary Society.
And I should say this is actually not this month's standard episode.
This is a special episode devoted exclusively to the train wreck masquerading as the fiscal
year 2026 budget request for NASA that was dropped just as I record this over a month ago.
The full details. You may know some of the details what's in this budget.
You may be learning about them for the first time, but I wanted to devote an entire special episode of the Space Policy Edition
just to what is in here and how to read and interpret some of what's going on.
The 2026 budget request, the full details,
the full grisly details were released on May 30th.
We knew already that NASA was going to be cut by about 25%
and that science within NASA was going to be cut by 47%.
Both of those already we knew were historic levels of cuts.
This is unprecedented.
Additionally, what we learned from the full details of this budget is some of the new initiatives
directing human spaceflight exploration towards Mars, while at the same time undermining some of
the very technologies, infrastructure, and capabilities necessary to get them there.
And by being so profoundly divisive and by effectively not even publicly talking about
this budget, NASA itself and the administration that has proposing this radical change to NASA
is avoiding any level of strategic implementation and strategic focus,
creating the opposite in a sense of a foundation to build on
when it inevitably must pass forward these plans to the next administration. Instead, this budget is an
anti-strategy or an un-strategic budget. This budget is also profoundly wasteful,
even though it pertains to save money by cutting spending. It does so at the expense of well-performing
capabilities, well-performing spacecraft, and by literally throwing away and turning off perfectly well-functioning
systems that would require billions of dollars to restore.
This is an unstrategic, wasteful, and unprecedented budget proposal for NASA.
None of these three words are hyperbole. These are the most
dispassionate ways, I think, to express just how radical this budget is. And it's
not just me that shares the concerns for this. It's not just the planetary
society that is pushing back on this. So to acknowledge this, and I think to bring
in a wider range of perspectives, we invited two guests on the show to join me and my colleague Jack Corale,
who is our Director of Government Relations.
Joining me this episode is Alicia Brown.
She is the Executive Director of the Commercial Space Federation,
which represents and looks out for the interests of the commercial new space companies,
currently really, you know, defining this future era of space that we're in.
She is a veteran space policy and legislative affairs professional.
She worked at NASA's Legislative Affairs in the past.
She has worked for members of Congress and in the Senate's Commerce Committee
as professional staff.
In addition to Alicia, I'm excited to welcome Brittany Webster, who is the Assistant Director
of Science Policy and Government Relations for AGU, the American Geophysical Union, which
represents earth scientists and planetary scientists around the country and around the
globe.
The AGU has been doing a lot of work and is also rallying their professional members,
their professional scientists to visit their members of Congress and push back against these cuts. Both organizations,
along with a number of many, many other organizations, are stepping up and discussing the serious
issues with this proposal that we really hope will be addressed by Congress in the coming months.
The 2026 budget is a lot of things and it's not even
entirely bad. Even the better ideas that it has though, it self-sabotages. And this is why it's
so important, I think, to talk plainly and honestly about what this budget does. That even if one
agrees with the deprioritization of space science, or cutting aeronautics by a
third, or cutting space technology by half, or removing all of NASA's outreach and educational
funding, reducing NASA's civil servant staff to the lowest levels since the 1960 fiscal
year before the first human had flown into space.
Even if you agree with all of those cuts and agree with the proposal to shift the energy of the human spaceflight
program away from the moon and to Mars, you should not like this budget.
Because at the end of the day, by making no effort to sell this, to create a coalition,
to create consensus about what it's doing, to make
no effort to reach out to the other party or to build support from industry or academic
institutions or space professional societies, it is not going to sustain itself.
So the worst possible outcome of this budget would be significant destruction of well performing
unique capabilities, particularly in space science and technology, in order to pursue
an ill-fated and short-term Mars direction that will wither in a subsequent administration
because there is no one in
a sense to pass the baton to.
This is not a good strategy.
This is why it's unstrategic.
This is why it's wasteful.
It will result in something weaker, smaller, less capable, and possibly, and this is my
broad worry, far more politically divided than it ever needed to be.
If you wanna do something about this,
there are many opportunities still,
particularly if you live in the United States.
You can check out Brittany's organization,
the American Geophysical Union,
particularly if you are a member
or a professional scientist.
You can go to the Planetary Society at planetary.org
and you will find a number of actions you can take right now to speak up
and to push back and to share your concern about this direction for NASA to your elected officials.
This is possibly one of the most impactful moments that NASA is facing in its existence
and a time where if you have never taken action or if you are on the fence about whether it's
time to do something, this is the time to do something.
And now let's welcome our guests and we will go into the details of NASA's fiscal year
2026 budget.
You can find it at nasa.gov slash budget if you want to follow along and look at all of
the details with us or go to planetary.org save NASA science and you can
see some of the details charts plots context everything there here we go I am here with my
all-star cast of space policy experts Alicia Brown from CSF Jack my colleague from the Planetary
Society Brittany Webster from the American Geophysical Union.
Thank you all for being with me today
on the special edition of the Space Policy Edition.
Thanks, great to see you and great to be here.
Thanks for all the lulz.
Okay, well, this is all about the fiscal year 2026 budget
or the disaster that is masquerading, I think,
as a budget for NASA and it's broadly also
a National Science Foundation
that Brittany will talk about a little bit.
Alicia, I want to start with you from Commercial Space
Federation.
What are your kind of big picture reactions
to this proposal that cuts NASA by 25%
and obviously cuts a lot of sub areas within it?
I think the overall reaction from CSF and our members,
we've got 85 members that represent
kind of the span of what's going on in commercial space from launch to remote sensing.
There are a couple of areas in there where there are some opportunities that we see,
but overall the reaction from our members was with a 25% budget cut, we're going to
be doing less overall.
There's less opportunity for everyone.
And I think there's a lot of concern at the cuts across each mission
directorate that, you know, within space technology, they're
investing in things that commercial companies would at
some point like to take over. And in other mission
directorates, those are the real opportunities for them to do
business and to, you know, to do more science, do more exploration
next year and within the next couple years. But this level of
cut, it seems like NASA's barely
going to be able to keep the lights on on some of the
programs they have, much less doing new exciting things.
The idea that I think the commercial sector even is not
excited about this budget kind of undermines some of that,
I think, broader messaging of this, right?
That it's still NASA is a really core customer for a lot
of your, what do you call them, participants, members of the of the Commercial Space Federation, right? And sets these kind of broad goals too,
that the commercial industry then fills in and can participate in. Yeah, the goal of a lot of
our companies is to help NASA and other government customers to do really cool things, but for less
money and maybe faster. They're commercial in that they're willing to invest their own company's resources
into some of these projects.
But ultimately, a lot of them are still
interested in government customers,
and you just see a lot less opportunity
if you're going to make cuts of this magnitude.
Yeah.
I mean, just for space technology,
which does this basic technology development,
it's cut almost in half, right?
It's a huge cut from that. And these are projects that a lot of it's cut almost in half, right? It's a huge cut from that.
And these are projects that a lot of it's specifically
earmarked for small business contracts and support.
A lot of it is to demonstrate technologies at Mars
and elsewhere, right?
These kind of early seed technologies to be able to enable
future exploration.
It's one of those things, I think the biggest one for me
out of space technology was nuclear propulsion,
which is one of those,
you know, that's clearly a, we need the public sector to invest in, right? That that's a
big, big meaty thing and could enable, be transformative in the future, right? Could
enable all these other activities that undermines, I'd say their broader goals of even sending
humans to Mars in the long run.
I think that's why that was so confusing is that there's all this, you know,
rhetoric about going to Mars
and a lot of excitement about human missions to Mars.
You know, even when I was on the committee and at NASA
for the last 10, 15 years, we've been talking about this,
but the conversation has usually been about,
well, we need to make these investments
in nuclear propulsion,
both nuclear thermal and nuclear electric.
And we had finally kind of gotten NASA started
in some of those efforts only to now have it pulled back.
It's just really confusing, I think, across the budget
as to how does this plans and this budget match up
with some of the goals we've laid out for ourselves?
And there's just not a lot of detail.
I would also say, you know, in the exploration account
where there are potentially some opportunities
for commercial companies to do more if SLS and Orion are
eventually retired, but there's just not
a lot of details about how that's going to happen.
Is it going to be a competition?
I think overall, we're willing to give them
a little bit of space to tell us,
but it's just really unclear with what's been presented
so far to the public.
Yeah.
Jack, what are the three words that we like to use
to describe this budget?
Unprecedented, unstrategic, and wasteful.
And I mean, Alicia hit a great note there
in that NASA has really been working,
yeah, the better part of the last two decades
on building a strategy.
I mean, it's in law since I think the 05 authorization
that the ultimate
goal of the human program at NASA is to send humans to Mars. And it's not like this is
some novel new idea. This has been on the books in title 51 for the better part of 20
years. And to be this unstrategic with that approach is just unprecedented and wasteful.
See, there we are.
I used all three of them.
Yeah.
You are devastating so much and then undermining even technologies the agency would actually
need, like also canceling telecom spacecraft at Mars now, for example, then to have it
to be so divisive, then who do you hand this off to to finish to carry you forward?
It's not even, it doesn't even internally cohere in its devastation that it does. to be so divisive, then who do you hand this off to to finish, to carry you forward?
It doesn't even internally cohere in its devastation
that it does.
Yeah, I think everyone who's involved in space
knows that these programs take a long time to come to fruition.
It's a long time to develop new spacecraft and new launch
systems.
And over the past four years, when I was at NASA,
we spent a lot of time laying out
what are the objectives for lunar exploration, for Mars exploration and beyond, and trying to set up
what's the blueprint to extend human presence throughout the solar system. And we talked a lot
about keeping to the plan, sticking to the plan, no matter what the resources look like, but
it feels kind of like now we're maybe throwing out that plan and haven't decided on what the new plan
is yet. I'm worried that we're losing a lot of plan and haven't decided on what the new plan is yet.
I'm worried that we're losing a lot of precious time.
And that means that just sets us back that much further
to actually extend humans into the solar system.
Brittany, what was AGU's general response to this budget?
And also, your purview extends also
to National Science Foundation.
Were you excited about this?
No.
I. Yes, fair enough. National Science Foundation. Were you excited about this? No.
Yes, fair enough. Yeah, right.
That's the easy thing to say.
I think originally it's disappointment, right?
But I want to pick up on something Alicia said,
and I think confusing.
I think there are some stated goals the administration's
talked a lot about.
And then I think you see the budget across the sciences,
and largely it's confusing because it's unsupportive of those stated goals, you know,
especially a lot of things talking about America first and one of the places we've been first for
a really long time is in science, you know, not just in space, but also just in science more
generally. And then I think you have a budget
that doesn't reflect that at all.
And there's a lot of scaling back,
a lot of pulling back from missions
and really in many ways seeding that leadership,
I would say to other countries,
which one of my favorite things now let's talk about is,
at the beginning it was us and Russia, right?
Like that was it, Those were the space players.
And that's not the case anymore.
And so to pull back at this moment
just seems really disappointing.
Especially as we're hearing from members every day
that I think this budget really pushes a lot of our members.
And I should say, each year we represent a global community
of about half a million in earth and space sciences
and also just allies and kind of partners. A lot of them now are looking outside the U.S. for
opportunities and especially I would say our youngest and brightest, which is really the one
of my biggest concerns is the fact that you know the people who are the future PIs, the future
innovators, those people now are I mean looking everywhere outside the future innovators. Those people now are, I mean, looking everywhere
outside the US, and that includes countries
that maybe we don't love so much.
Yeah, it's one of those things, again, it just,
it almost, again, it doesn't make sense
from a policy perspective because it's not,
it's not the product of a considered policy process.
And when we know from, you know, so the Office of Management
and Budget, the White House's accounting office,
ultimately approves and helps prepare this budget proposal
to Congress.
This process, from everything we understand,
was a uniquely centralized process.
And NASA and NSF and other science organizations
were just not a party to these discussions.
They were effectively just given numbers,
told to do whatever to advance the president's priorities
with those.
And this is why it's kind of this incoherent mess, right?
That it doesn't actually do what it's going to say,
but it also then devastates so much in the immediate terms.
One couldn't even argue that, well, it's just
going to be messy until we're set on this right path. There is no real path out of here. That's what's almost shocking.
And so it's this, because it's a budget first policy process that doesn't ultimately incorporate
strategic thinking. Yeah, the process is very confusing right now too. We're normally in this
posture where the president proposes and the Congress proposes is, you know, what everyone around DC likes to say. But it does certainly seem like the decisions
have really been consolidated at OMB. And I think, you know, we've all been hearing, it's very unclear,
are they going to listen to what Congress appropriates? There's debate going on right now
this afternoon in the Senate about the rescissions package, and you know, how that gets handled and how the administration responds to if that package is not passed I think is going to be
really telling for us. You know we're here to talk about FY26 but I think we're all also in the back
of our mind concerned about well what's happening with the FY25 money that's already been appropriated
is that going to be spent how Congress told the agencies to spend it. And if not, that really limits all of us
as advocates how we can get anything accomplished.
Well, fundamentally, it would change the nature of our
democracy, if that's the case, in the sense
that if you don't have this kind of citizen
through representation appeal to how money is spent
and prioritized, then I guess we're basically
making direct appeals to individuals
in the royal court, like in some kind of courtier system.
Jack, how are you seeing some of this reaction on the Hill
to this budget?
Nobody's trying to sell this budget to the Hill.
And we've heard that from Republican offices,
Democratic offices,
ranging the entire ideological spectrum.
This is not something that I think anybody,
nobody sees this as a positive development
for the space program.
And even just the fact that NASA itself,
the interim leadership who have,
in just the past few
months been pretty well aligned with with the administration,
still aren't even trying to sell this budget. So they haven't
even really fully convinced the people who are notially in
charge of, you know, giving Congress the deeper dive on
details, because there are none. Right. And so what we've heard is a lot of frustration
and consternation about this budget.
It hurts everybody and not in the,
well, we all have to tighten our fiscal belt
and be prepared to make cuts.
This is this wanton destruction of the competitive edge
that the nation has built up over generations
of scientists and engineers and innovators and entrepreneurs and explorers is just being
tossed out really on the whim of one person and that's Russ Vo.
The director of the OMB, yeah.
The director of the Office of Management and Budget. And so there is a lot of feeling that this is dead on arrival in Congress, but it does,
as Alicia pointed out, you know, the president proposes this and it kicks off that process.
And now we're in that period of time where the politics, the capital P politics of this
is going to play out. And the House and Senate are both controlled by the Republicans, and they are going to
make their proposals over these next few weeks, as soon as two weeks from now, as of recording,
on July 7th when the House votes on the initial markup of their budget proposal. And so we'll see what that frustration inevitably
turns into, if that really is an outright rejection,
or are there parts of this new budget
that people are going to take the opportunity to say,
well, we do need to make changes here, here, and here.
But a little bit of this is happening
in the dark for a lot of us.
I think this is why this is unusually,
for those listening, it's like this
is an unusually dangerous situation for these agencies
because I feel like in a more standard politics
that we've all grown up in, the power really
does rest with appropriators and Congress itself.
And there's all these varied interests
that will come and react and restore
a lot of these proposals.
But I think more broadly, the overall politics here
are so there's a dysfunction in Congress
in passing a budget at all.
And this year, Alicia, that you mentioned fiscal year 25,
they didn't.
They extended a full year of what's
called continuing resolution.
And so as a consequence of the inability of Congress
to respond quickly, perhaps, you have a real situation
where a lot of these guts can be imposed by default.
And this is why it's a particularly perilous time
for this.
Brittany, from AGU side of things,
how has, again, your organization
been responding to this?
And where do you see in terms of the congressional engagement
that you've been doing?
Are you optimistic that Congress is able to act,
or do you see these same kind of structural challenges?
In many ways, right?
I feel like Congress only have as much power
as they decide they have.
I'm always hopeful.
I don't think you work in policy unless you are in many ways a blind optimist. And that's, I think it's true. I don't think anyone's happy right now
with what's happening with funding, both with the grants that we know have, we've seen be canceled
because of executive orders. And, you know, also just the lack of information coming out of agencies, I think has been really tough for members of Congress.
And I think a lot of them were trying to deal with it on a case by case basis, but we know these are systemic issues that cannot be dealt with like that, especially on the scale that they were happening.
So thinking about FY25 and the situation we find ourselves in where we're worried both about FY25 and FY26 and whether FY25 cuts.
I mean, the fear, right, is that the FY26 president's budget request will be enacted
at the FY25 level without any say so from Congress.
And I think a lot of agencies from what we're hearing
are acting like that.
And that is a major concern and something that
I believe Congress is beginning to also be very concerned
about as they hear about the impacts
from their constituents on these cuts.
However, can Congress actually do something
to make sure that that's not the case
by actually
passing FR 26 appropriations, actually looking at the spend plans and making sure that they're
appropriate and to FY 25 CR marks?
I'm not sure.
There's a lot going on with reconciliation, with the first rescindance package we saw.
I'm just not sure whether Congress has.
I don't want to say the political.
Maybe it is the political will to do that.
I think you're highlighting a challenge here
is that there's the speed of Congress
and then there's the rapid speed of the administration
in terms of its actions, of how it's moving forward
with some of these changes that are, I'd say,
questionably legal and most likely will ultimately be challenged in court.
This idea called impoundment, where the president claims
that he doesn't have to spend money appropriated to him
by Congress, that's going to be a big challenge.
But what could happen, what we're worried about
is they'll start turning off missions this year,
because they say they're going to cancel them next year,
or not pay out the contracts that they had already granted this year, because they say they're going to cancel them next year or not pay out the contracts that they had already granted this year because they say they're going to cancel them next year.
Like that throws off and it's happening faster than you said Congress is able to respond given
its very, very narrow majorities in both House and Senate, but also these broader issues that
they're tackling with their own capital B budget reconciliation taxing and spending bills.
It's this omni-crisis that I've called it, right? That
if everything's in a crisis, that it's really hard. How do you get your one thing to get the
attention it needs? Because there's 18 other things. Alicia, you had something you wanted to add to
this. Yeah. I mean, as we're discussing how Congress responds to the president request,
you know, in this political climate, the reconciliation bill I found actually to be
a really interesting potential indicator that at least Chairman Cruz of the Commerce Committee used his portion of the
reconciliation bill to push back on some of these cuts in the exploration sector and is trying to
go ahead and pre-buy, you know, SLS and Orion and some of these other big ticket items that were
proposed to be canceled in the budget. So, I, that's one small indicator in Congress's 535
people who don't all think the same.
But I did think that that was interesting in the context
of other Republicans maybe not wanting to push back
against the president.
Yeah.
And that creates a situation, speaking a little bit more
about that reconciliation amendment,
is it creates a situation where the fiscal strain is not so
heavy on the rest of the NASA portfolio. So I know that's been a big question that we've gotten
about this capital B budget is how does that additional $10 billion, that supplemental $10
billion affect the rest of this conversation? And it really could, you know, depending on how the Senate acts on that amendment,
how the House responds to all of the Senate amendments,
there certainly is the Voterama,
as we call it, is happening sometime soon.
How the House responds to that will also be indicative
because it was not included on their side.
But now that there is a potential question on the floor,
how do these chambers respond to supporting NASA in that way?
And then Brittany, you made also a great point about the fact that this is a period of time
normally reserved for
input from the agency
to the appropriators.
They have budget hearings.
Traditionally by this point NASA and NSF and all the agencies would have had
their major budget hearing and the head of that agency
would have gone before the committees
in the House and Senate and made their pitch.
For NASA and NSF, that hasn't happened
because there just is no leadership, right?
It's all interim for both agencies.
And so that also makes it difficult
and I think compounds the frustration that appropriators are feeling towards this process in that they don't even have anybody they can ask
the questions of, of what is the plan and you know very little information coming out of the
administration to even defend this budget. Again further more variables I think in this this long
string that you know this this budget is set up to fail in a number
of ways and legislatively, it's certainly not sitting in a good position on the Hill.
But that goes to the other issue, is the Hill going to have input?
And how are they going to, if we, in the very likely, almost certain event that we have
a short-term continuing resolution for the first part of FY26.
How does the administration approach that?
Do we maintain that sort of decorum, the sort of unwritten rules of, well, you are keeping
funding at the previously enacted level, so we're going to spend at those previously enacted
levels?
Or are they going to try something new and try to impound funds or cancel contracts and grants and awards.
Stuff you can't come back from.
Stuff you can't come back from.
Turning off a spacecraft that's a billion miles away, you can't just flip the switch
again and get that thing back.
So let's talk a little bit, kind of dancing around the human exploration side of NASA's
budget.
So let's focus on that for a few minutes,
and then I'll switch to the other big one, science.
But for human exploration, the 26th budget
proposes this is the one area where
there's a plus sign, a positive growth
sign of about $600 million compared to the prior year.
I'd say it does a few very big things.
It proposes to end the Space Launch System rocket.
It proposes to end the space launch system rocket. It proposes to end the
Orion crew vehicle and it proposes roughly a billion dollars of money directed towards a
some sort of Mars, human Mars exploration initiative. Kind of Alicia, going back to some of
your issues you raised, the lack of details in some of those Mars exploration initiatives are
somewhat shocking to me as someone who reads budgets over the years. There's literally multiple lines of
like Mars technology budget, 300 million, 350 million. And it says, we'll figure out literally,
this is like, we'll figure out what this says, and we will brief Congress when appropriate.
So where does that money come from? What's it going to be used for? Is it enough for what they
needed for? Yeah. And while it looks good that there's
an increase to exploration, I want
to point out that they're moving clips out
of science and exploration.
They're apparently moving fission surface
power, which is for Artemis out of STMD,
space technology, to exploration.
And you have to consider, too, I don't
see the numbers in the budget that they presented,
but there should be termination liability costs if they are going to cancel some of these big
contracts. Not sure how much that is. So while maybe the number looks good, it's not clear to
me that there is actually a big increase for exploration. And like we keep saying, there's
not a lot of details yet on the plan for, okay, how are we going to move to some commercial systems?
Like I said, I think some of our members
are really excited about potentially stepping in
to offer solutions for lunar and Mars exploration.
But they haven't really laid out the plan
of how we're going to get there and procure those systems.
Yeah.
Talk a little bit about termination liability,
because I think this is, it sounds like probably
the most boring topic, but it's really interesting.
It's really relevant in that you have these big contracts
with Boeing and Lockheed and Northrop and others
to build these systems.
And there's something in the contract saying,
if NASA wants to end these prematurely,
it's not going to be free.
Right?
Yeah.
And I'm not an expert, and I don't know how much it
is in each contract, but exactly right.
The government is essentially guaranteed to these companies
under the cost plus type contracts,
that we're developing along with industry,
that we're going to be with you
and we're gonna buy these systems,
but if we decide not to, well, then we actually owe you money.
And it's not an insignificant amount of money in many cases.
I mean, considering that these are billions
and billion dollar programs,
I'm wondering, are we really saving all that much money in many cases, considering that these are billions and billion dollar programs.
I'm wondering, are we really saving all that much money
by canceling these programs in the future?
Again, it's just not really clear in this budget
what is going to be available to then transition
to new commercial systems.
And I think the key here, too, is that a lot of these savings
are in the future.
So this budget proposes to end SLS development,
but still fly SLS for Artemis II and III,
still fly Orion for Artemis II and III.
And so your real savings don't really show up
until fiscal year 2028, which is basically
the last year of this administration,
or one of the last years of the administration
in fiscal year 29.
So you're not actually shifting this big pot of money
towards these new commercial programs for Moon and Mars
till years down the road.
And you can only then do so much in the meantime
about spinning up these new projects.
The things that it does cancel is this Block 1B upgrade
for SLS and the Mobile Launch Tower, both of which,
I'd say are probably
more along the lines of the more reasonable policy decisions
that you could see from any administration coming in.
Those are both significant amounts of money for sure.
Yeah, I think around a half a billion dollars-ish a year.
That's where most of that money is being put towards Mars
in this budget.
In addition to this, there's this proposal
for a moon to Mars transportation program
from commercial providers.
And I'd say that's an interesting idea, but also there's not that many providers that
can actually provide those services at the moment, right?
It would basically be SpaceX and Blue Origin, maybe someone else, but also neither of those
can actually do it now.
They're both working, you know, systems and development, and we require those to then be available for any kind of Mars budget.
Brittany, is there anything on the exploration side that you or AGU noted,
or are you mainly focused on the science side?
I think we're mainly focused on the science side and especially the connection,
I would say, heliophysics, thinking about the cancellation of helioswarm.
And I'm very confused how we're
doing space exploration. Or I'll see, it seems counterintuitive if our focus is human exploration
to be canceling a mission like Helioswarm within heliophysics, which is specifically
designed to study the space environment that, you know, we hope to have astronauts in, which
I think is like our most important asset, right?
If we're launching humans to Mars if we hope to further human exploration
I imagine even beyond that at some point
We need to know so much more about our space environment
We just we don't know enough not yet and I would also add that to Mars itself
it cancels Mars Odyssey Maven at Mars and also Mars sample return and
itself, it cancels Mars Odyssey, Maven at Mars, and also Mars sample return.
And Jack and I always kind of a bit baffled at that as well,
because, oh, they'll just say, astronauts will pick up rocks
and bring them back.
Why do we need sample return to do that?
But then sample return is canceled
because it's too expensive and too complex.
And I have not seen that.
Alicia, you've looked at NASA, worked at NASA over years.
Has any project been made easier or cheaper
when you add humans into that mix of taking them into space?
That generally doesn't happen, right?
Yeah, this has been part of my frustration
about discussing a human mission to Mars.
As we've been talking on the last six months,
no one is talking about how difficult it is.
And Brittany points out some of the key issues
that we haven't figured out.
The galactic radiation and particles coming out of the sun
all pose real threats to human health.
And we haven't closed, I think the case yet
of how we would totally, how we would get humans there,
how they would survive on the surface
and how we get them back.
I don't think that the average lay person realizes
that when we speak about a mission to Mars,
we're talking about at least, I think, what is it, a six or seven month journey there.
One way. Yeah.
Yeah, one way. And then depending on how the planets are aligned, it depends on,
and that's how long you have to stay on the surface. It's certainly no small undertaking.
And why, to go back to where we were at the beginning, we've been talking about investing
in nuclear propulsion technologies that could hopefully get us there a bit faster than chemical rockets and therefore lessen the impact on human health.
But yeah, there's so many long calls and technology that we need to figure out before we can safely
send the human to Mars, especially if we want those humans to come back alive.
Right.
Yeah, that's the key element, right?
I would say that should be a top priority.
I don't think that should be controversial to say it's a top priority.
Well, that's why it tends to be more expensive and complex.
Because you do robot spacecraft.
You don't want to lose them.
But if you do, OK, you can build another one that doesn't work
that way with humans.
Something else I noticed from this budget along the same
lines is the idea that they're going to, it's really,
to me, you read this budget.
The idea of anything after Artemis 3 at the moon
really becomes a hand wavy affair. And that was kind of shocking to me, you read this budget, the idea of anything after Artemis 3 at the moon really becomes a hand wavy affair.
And that was kind of shocking to me
because you would see previously in these other budget
projections, Artemis 4, Artemis 5,
this continuous US presence at the moon.
And they don't say they're not doing that.
But clearly the shift in this budget
is to say, no, now we transition to Mars.
And Artemis, therefore, becomes the boots and flag thing
that it was always designed not to be.
So you can pivot to this Mars thing, which,
as Alicia points out, is much, much harder and less likely.
And I wrote a piece saying politically unstable
in this kind of framing.
Along with that, this says that it's
going to take all these lessons from really engaging
the commercial sector, which I think
is those highlights, opportunities, Alicia,
that you mentioned from your members, with these kind of Mars initiatives. But something that was
interesting to me is like, we'll take the lessons from the moon and apply it to Mars.
But we haven't really, we're just starting to get to the moon with our, like, we haven't really
have that many lessons yet. We're figuring them out right now. And this is the whole point of
Artemis is that we commit for this long time. What lessons do we learn? How do we
work a project? So, you know, they propose a Mars payload delivery project to, you know,
modeled after Eclipse, the one at the moon, but propose less money for that than the one
at the moon. Does that make sense to your members that you would have less money to
go 100 million miles further than the moon to deliver these types of payloads? That doesn't add up to me. Yeah, I mean, I will say,
I think doing a commercial Mars program is like a really good precursor for human missions.
I think there are a lot of companies who could do Mars orbiters and we could probably do some
cool heliophysics or astrophysics missions on commercial platforms, sending them towards Mars.
or astrophysics missions on commercial platforms, you know, sending them towards Mars.
But there's, you know, for the last, since, you know, Bridenstine rolled out Artemis, there's a huge coalition of companies working on moon technologies. And I just wonder what happens
to this kind of burgeoning space economy if NASA is going to turn away from the moon.
Yeah.
And then of course, also there's the geopolitical context, which is really why, you know, one of the
big reasons why Congress is so bought into lunar exploration is that, you know, China and its partners are also
planning a lunar base. And what does that mean if they're there and can establish the norms
and carve out territory for themselves and NASA isn't there? And as we've said, you know, Mars,
we expect that to take a lot longer. Well, what are we going to be doing if we're, you know,
we're de-orbing ISS or potentially walking away from the moon to focus on some longer-term
Mars program?
It just feels like we're going to be losing our competitive edge in many of these domains.
Yeah.
I mean, the whole point of getting a Vardemus, I would imagine from, again, from the business
case, if you're putting in your own money as a private company to match some NASA contribution
to do a lunar access capability or provide a service, you make your money back
on the back end of that contract of providing then
that service for years, right?
Kind of that's the model of providing cargo
to the space station.
And so I would imagine this budget would actually
make it a lot harder for private investors
to raise money for lunar activities
in CISLUNAR economy because is there a commitment anymore?
I mean, that was the whole reason
we made this long-term commitment
to provide this opportunity for these new companies
to form and thrive.
It's just baffling to me that this is,
it's like unlearning the lessons
that the first Trump administration had made
with setting this up in the first place.
We have to keep moving along,
I think any other highlights from anyone else
on the exploration side, I guess I should admit,
it cancels the Gateway Space Station,
thereby screwing over our international partners,
which is where all of our international commitments were.
Jack, maybe just real quickly,
circle back to that cruise amendment,
because it does undo basically this entire proposal.
And just briefly again, say why this is separate
from this appropriations process.
Right, so yeah, so the reconciliation budget
that is being discussed currently is that,
we keep saying capital B budget, that
is looking at the very large picture that's
mandatory spending, taxation, tax breaks, that like really,
the incoming and outgoing funds of the United States
does not get to the granularity
of individual agencies.
But what's happening now is a number of senators, and in this case, Chairman Cruz, has provided
an amendment that sets aside a supplemental $9.995 billion, $10 billion, specifically
earmarked for these specific projects, purchasing SLS for Artemis 4 and
5, supplementing the funding for Orion crew vehicle development, funding the lunar gateway
space station, as well as a number of activities including the Mars Telecommunications Orbiter.
We talk about infrastructure at Mars.
This sets aside $700 million specifically for a dedicated telecommunications or a commercially
sourced telecommunications orbiter for a Mars sample return campaign, as well as future
crewed missions to the planet.
And so this amendment really sets aside that $10 billion in a very specific way so that
to maintain minimum funding levels for those key projects.
And it's available for 10 years too.
And it's available through September 30th, 2032.
But all of it has to be obligated by the end of fiscal year 2029.
And so that's September 30th, 2029.
And so all of that funding has to be obligated in some way, shape or form between now and
then should this amendment become
law.
And so that allows the agency a little bit more flexibility
in the rest of the budget to support its other activities
and maintains that support for a sustainable lunar program that
transitions to a Mars program, along the lines of that strategy
we talked about.
So it was basically rejected, some of these core tenants,
within like four days of this budget coming out
by the top Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee.
TBD, whether that actually happens, but I thought notable.
And I think goes to the point that this is not
being effectively sold.
We'll be right back with the rest of our space policy
edition of Planetary Radio after this short break.
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Let's switch to science. Science is cut in this budget by 47%. It would lower science
funding to its lowest point adjusted for inflation since 1984. It would cut some divisions more
than others, including I'd say maybe an astonishing is the right word here, 67%, 65% cut to astrophysics.
So two thirds basically of astrophysics evaporates overnight in this budget. 50-ish percent cuts to earth science, 30 percent cut to planetary science, heliophysics down by roughly 50 percent, right, Brittany?
And so Brittany, from AGU, you kind of expressed this a little bit.
What would you highlight as some of the most worst, the worst aspects of this that you saw?
Where do we even begin with something this dramatic?
Well, I think as the Planetary Society well knows,
I think the cuts to the decadal missions, right?
So we have Mars sample return.
We have the GDC mission in heliophysics.
And then we have the cancellation
of two of the Earth System Observatory missions.
I think they have very scientific names on the atmosphere
observing system and the surface biology and geology mission. So I think first of all,
given how important the decadal mission process is for our communities in terms of just really
setting the vision, right, for our communities and where the innovation happens
for our communities and what I think to a large degree inspires the community, but also
signals that there's a future for the community and a robust future for the community.
I think the cancellation of those decadal missions, I can't speak to, I'm sure there's
something canceled big in astrophysics, I can't speak to, I'm sure there's something canceled big in astrophysics, I can't speak to that.
But the cancellation of those missions, I think, is the biggest red flag and concern.
But alongside that, I think it's the concern of the existing missions.
The cancellation, I believe it's over 40 missions.
But when you look at them, you know, directorate or division by division, when I look at the
cancellation of the heliophysics missions, I mean, this is devastating for the community. And, you know, I think Helioph- I
think Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 are the best examples, right? So they've been in existence
since the 70s. They are literally still going strong, still producing science,
still doing interesting things. And so many of these missions, they have second
lives now too, right? They're doing new science, science that wasn't even thought about when
they were conceived because of how long it takes to build a satellite. You know, we're
often talking, this is going to be conservative, but from decadal maybe or like conception
to actual being built, I imagine we're talking about at least 10 years.
10 years, don't we?
Yeah.
I would say at least. And so I think to cancel those missions to me seems really
short-sighted. But also, as you said earlier, it seems wasteful. Like, why are we canceling
good missions that are in operation that we've already spent billions of dollars
building? And the other thing that I think is really concerning about them, there was a good
Twitter thread by someone talking about how almost think of an ecosystem, basically, that the way
these missions are used, it's not just about the one mission, it's about the constellation of missions.
Right? So maybe I'm doing a little bit of work from this satellite, but then I'm also using are used, it's not just about the one mission. It's about the constellation of missions.
So maybe I'm doing a little bit of work from this satellite,
but then I'm also using this satellite.
But also think about when satellites are built.
You might build one satellite, and then you
go on to the next satellite.
You're using a shared workforce and a shared
set of capabilities that people can train on and move back
and forth between the other
and it then it benefits all these other industries too.
Yeah, basically we've created based on our scale, right?
Like we have like a scale of economy here
that we're able to take advantage of.
And also our scientists are able to take advantage of.
And I will also bring out Landsat Next
and basically, you know, Landsat Next
was supposed to be this great innovation for Landsat Next was supposed to be this great innovation for Landsat.
And I don't know if you know this, but Landsat is the most cited science mission, apparently,
and it's the most used by other federal science partners.
And so Landsat Next was supposed to be a series of satellites through satellites as opposed
to the one.
And it was going to have all these innovations.
So instead of a 16 day interval, they would be on a six day interval.
Basically the amount of science we were going to get out of it would be at least
double. We were going to get a lot more science out of it.
And this is a mission that we know, right?
Based on the scientific output, the use by federal partners, it's used heavily.
You've had the continuous earth observation with those using the same types of instruments
that are calibrated very carefully to match each other for over 50 years, right?
Like that's a priceless data set.
It's a place of pride for a lot of people and a lot of members of Congress too.
And so Landsat Next was going to give us all these great innovations and basically the
budget's like, no, let's just build the same satellite again when we need one. So I think that's also really disappointing.
And again, this kind of circles back to the workforce comment in general. I mean, I think
this is a blow to the NASA and the space science workforce. I just, the optics alone are not,
I think the message it sends is almost
The optics are not great. Oh, I don't want I don't want to overstate but let's say the optics are not great and
You know, I think you know you guys can talk about planet Earth's aside science
But I think one of the best missions that to me demonstrates. This is also the canceling of their toss
Like the Venus community, you know, where's their North Star now?
Yeah, all of being like very Veritas, DaVinci, and even Venus technology development, which
is like five million a year is all excised out of this. It says Venus no longer exists
in this in this budget.
And the contribution to the European Space Agency's Envision mission, which is we're
providing an instrument. This is not the full up we're building the whole thing. This is we're just providing an instrument for this platform.
And even that is deemed unimportant for the only other terrestrial body in the solar system
that has a thick atmosphere.
Right.
Those core Venus missions have just been jerked around almost since the get go too.
It's been kind of years of are we doing them?
Are we not doing them?
Yeah.
I feel so bad for the Venus community right now.
The last time the US had a mission at Venus, Jack, what was that?
Ninety four is when Magellan ended in 1994.
So, yeah, it's I think it's time to look at that plan.
Yeah. Alicia, from your members, what are what's their reaction to the science cuts?
I mean, it's it's devastating, you know, and considering too that
because we've been under discretionary
spending caps for the past two fiscal years, 24 and 25, science was already hurting a lot.
I think they lost over those two years about 10 billion or 2 billion dollars that they had planned
to spend. You know, they were already really pinching pennies and canceling missions where
they could. And it's just, as you guys have said, they can't meet these numbers without turning off
current missions. And so therefore, of
course, there's already very few new missions. Now there's almost nothing. You
know, I think the commercial community is and I believe wholeheartedly that
there are certainly ways that we could do cool, really cool, really great
science for less money. But again, there's just not this opportunity if
you're making these deep of cuts.
You know, and the earth science stuff is really hitting home to me right now as we're going through this crazy heat wave in the on the east coast on the southeast. You know, NASA and NOAA
are the premier science agencies that are really monitoring the earth. You know, NASA and NOAA put
out that 2024 was the hottest year on record. If we're turning off these missions, if we aren't
doing the new Earth Systems Observatory,
how are we really gonna know
even what's happening with our home planet?
Yeah, and Earth science is a huge purchaser
of commercial Earth imagery and observations too.
Yeah, they've been kind of a really,
set a really good example, I think,
for the rest of science of how you can partner
and use commercial technologies
to do really great science.
That program that you mentioned, they buy data directly
from a bunch of different companies, folks like Planet
and Maxar, who have a really great revisit rates
and can have really great resolution of what's
going on in the Earth.
It's really great for the farming community.
They can tell what's happening on their crops.
Of course, there's huge impacts to predicting weather, sea
level rise, a bunch of different applications
that are really important that Earth science feeds into.
Yeah.
It's Earth science, again, cut by, I think, about 53%
in this and loses.
You bring up this important thing, both of you,
which is the spigot of future missions.
It takes a long time to design and build these.
And then depending on where you're going,
it can take a while to get there,
commission it, start getting your data. time to design and build these. And then depending on where you're going, it can take a while to get there, commission
it, start getting your data.
Almost every future project is functionally canceled.
There's a handful left.
And so it's not only just wiping out a third of active missions, it's wiping out our future
in space science.
And even so then if those all end and then we restart, we basically have to start from
zero.
And so even to rebuild will take a decade to do that.
It is not a forward-looking document,
which is ironic when we talk about space exploration, right?
That's the essence.
Brittany, we all have to be optimist and space policy
doubly so.
It's like everything you always have to point at an empty point
in space and hope you trust that your calculations are right that there'll be a planet there when your spacecraft gets there and
It's all about this forward-looking aspect, which is just not here expressed at all and it's
In science and again in the lack of effort to sell that the Mars initiative that cannot politically last
This is a very long-term consequences from this
Brittany from your Member a lot of your
members are professional scientists. What are you hearing from them? What are the consequences that
we're seeing already? This is such an overused phrase, but we're in existential grab. I mean,
I think a lot of people, I've been asking the question, how long until this really births?
Like how long until you and your family
are having to make different decisions, basically?
And for a lot of people, I think it's the end of the year.
But also too, I envision that this school year,
we know a lot of grad students, post-docs,
either got their offers, and also too,
I will say just early scientists, they got their offers and also too I will say just early scientists they got their offers
rescinded or grad students weren't they you know a lot of colleges and universities they didn't
even offer positions to any grad students this year so then I imagine your lab is now so you're
underfunded you're understaffed as well and we're in times. I think a lot of them don't know what's
going to happen. A lot of them are dependent on, you know, NASA grants and we could talk
about ROSES as well and how delayed that has been. But also then with NSF pulling back,
with DOE Office of Science pulling back grants, we're in a really difficult position right now where I think a lot of
professors are going to have to make really tough decisions soon.
And perhaps then we have scientists, you know, who are only working part time.
Because they just don't leave the leave the field altogether, you the field altogether,
because I just don't see how some of them will be able to support themselves.
To be quite frank.
One of the numbers that really stuck out to me
in the NSF budget was that they envision
their grant acceptance rate going down from 26%,
which already that's pretty low to 7%, 6%.
You know, I-
So like one out of every 20 applications will get funded.
So either now I'm a researcher spending all of my time writing grant proposals
just to get like that one, right? Like I'm submitting a hundred to hopefully get one
or I'm, you know, really having to scale back.
As you say, like leaving the field or maybe just becoming like a part-time scientist
or moving to another country. I think we all saw. I can't remember.
I know it was Europe. I can't remember if it was like the EU itself or a country in Europe who put out a call.
They set aside a certain amount of money and it was France and then asked other scientists from the US like,
Do you are you interested in coming?
And they said they had to shut it down because they got too many requests
and proposals.
Yeah.
And if I remember correctly, it was also, it wasn't just funding for, oh, maybe the
next year or the next five years, it was 20 years of committed funding for those folks
to move. And this is a national asset, right? These are the best and brightest minds that help innovate, that
come up with new ideas, that change our concepts of our place in space, of the way our planet
operates, the environment in space, and these places beyond here. And that all has benefits
here, right, as technology spinoffs and applications here terrestrially, here on Earth, and it's
a national asset, right? We're known the world over that's why we have
so many
people that move here to be part of the science community because it's
the best in the world but this turns off that spigot and says this is actually
is unimportant to us when it just is
is undoing this foundation of what modern life has become.
It turns out that-
Yeah, it's wild.
I mean, this has been US policies
since Ban of Arbush and Endless Frontier.
And all of us have been in the science policy world
for a while and seen the economic studies
and all the different spin-offs and technology
that come out of NSF.
Google, I think, started at NSF, CRISPR, A ton of these, it's amazing, I guess,
that France has taken note and learned these lessons
where current policymakers maybe haven't.
Yeah, I mean, the whole post-war policy
was realizing that science is a key aspect
of national security and thriving.
And that's why it is a role and needs to be funded
by the public to some degree,
because it enables this long-term security
through workforce capability and just cutting edge again.
You want the talent and the minds.
So this turns off the spigot, because I'll point out, too,
there's a lot of fundamental grants for scientists
that roses as a version of a way that scientists can apply
to a grant application area.
But a lot of this funding is cut by a third or half or even
two thirds in some cases.
So it's just no money to support the active science even
of the data that has come back from these missions.
We lose missions like Juno at Jupiter,
New Horizons in the Kuiper belt.
We lose missions like Chandra in orbit, X-ray, space telescope.
These are irreplaceable assets.
Or to replace them would cost billions.
What they do retain even, they cut the operating funding for.
And so they'll do, you know, James Webb Space Telescope
loses a third of its budget for science.
That's what it's there for.
It just will do days without science.
Mars Perseverance loses almost 20% of its operating budget.
That's two days a week basically.
Now it'll sit on the surface of Mars, not able to operate,
because you're paying engineers and people to run it. So again, it's complete walking away from from not only our commitments, but the future of this. It's it's hard to express.
You know, hyperbole is actually failing us maybe like in some ways that it's it sounds like hyperbole in some ways,
but it's it's this is probably the most dispassionate way we can talk about this.
Very quickly, let's talk science in another area
on the International Space Station.
It's set to be deorbited around 2030.
This was prior presidential policy as well.
But this budget takes away a third of operating funds
for the International Space Station.
Severely reduces the number of astronauts
that can go on board.
Severely reduces the number of cargo, the amount of cargo
that can go up.
And it cuts functionally all scientific research, both on the ISS research time, the time
that astronauts spend doing it, but also
on the microgravity biological research
side of the science community that creates the experiments
themselves.
Alicia, did you want to quickly talk
about the ISS changes that you're looking at?
Yeah.
I mean, just like in science, the current operating science
missions,
it just makes no sense to me.
The taxpayers have spent billions of dollars to create this fantastic orbital microgravity laboratory.
It's obviously not going to last forever.
We're preparing for the commercial space stations that will follow on.
But I mean, number one, we really need the research to keep going on stations
so that there is a clear pathway to transition
activity from ISS to commercial stations. But also, why did we spend all this money as a
country to invest in this laboratory if we aren't going to use it to the fullest extent
possible and to its full capacity for as long as it's actually flying? It makes no sense
to me. Reducing crew up there like we're going to literally just be in station
keeping and not doing any research.
Like what's what's really the point of that?
That I keep saying it's without science, it's a national laboratory.
Without science to do stuff up there, you have literally nothing to do except to fix
things, you know, to fix the toilet basically, right?
Like the why are we sending astronauts there just to float around in space?
It's not their favorite thing to do, Fun Station.
Yeah, I mean, they hate it.
Exactly.
I mean, you need to fix things.
But if there's nothing to no larger purpose,
they're just being there to be there.
It becomes like this existential crisis of why are we even
doing that?
And I would even argue probably all of these kind of things
start to undermine this public investment of why
are we doing this?
They're not doing science in space.
What are they doing to begin with?
What are we going to Mars for with? There's no explanation.
We're cutting back on the science, which people say that they want NASA to do.
It starts to create the separation between what the space program does
and what the public expects of it.
Brittany, do you have any thoughts on the on the ISS and microgravity
communities as well?
So not a lot, but I just want to kind of pick up on what you said and maybe say that
like definitely just maybe a little more explicitly.
But I think it gets lost sometimes when we talk about human exploration that the point of exploring more planets
is in many ways to do more science, to do more interesting science, to do more hands-on science, right?
Science that robots can't do.
Probably more experience on human health, you know, and the impacts on how do we
improve human health. And just that we're continuing again to see benefits on this
and if we're going to Mars, again, it also seems like a loss of opportunity to
continue doing research, especially on human health in space, because
I fear the general public does not know enough how many gaps there are still between our
knowledge and how we can safely explore deeper and longer in space.
Yeah, absolutely. Other quick hits here, STEM education, NASA's outreach and space grant support zeroed out
completely.
We've also seen third cuts to overhead and operations, which basically translate to roughly
losing a third of NASA's remaining civil servant workforce, which reduces NASA's workforce
to its smallest level since fiscal year 1960, which began in 1959.
So I mean, even talking about this broad conflicts of incoherency,
going to the moon and then going to Mars with the workforce
you had when you started Project Mercury.
Again, that just doesn't check out at all in terms
of how this can work.
In the last few minutes here, at least
I'll start with you, from Commercial Space Federation's perspective, where are you Leesh, I'll start with you from Commercial Space Federation's
perspective.
Where are you moving from this, and how
can people follow what Commercial Space
Federation is doing?
Yeah, thanks for that.
So you can follow us on X and on LinkedIn
at the Commercial Space Federation.
If you are a commercial space company
and are interested in joining us and our policy in Axi work
in DC, please feel free to reach out on our website.
NASA is just one area that we're focused on.
There are cuts happening at NOAA,
the Office of Space Commerce and Department of Defense
that we're worried about as well.
And we're also doing some work with the FAA
to try to reform space launch and reentry regulations.
So a ton going on in our world right now
that we're focused on, but NASA is something
that I think is a crown
jewel of our country. And many, many of the companies that are part of our coalition want
to do work with NASA. And so we're just trying to get like you guys are, the word about what
are the opportunities that we're losing here and what does that impact mean for the US economy
and for US global leadership as a whole? Well said, Brittany. What is AGU doing and how
can people follow or even help? Yeah. So I would say you can follow us on all the social media
things. If you follow us on Blue Sky or X, we're at aguscipolicy and our email address is sciencepolicy
at agu.org. If you want to email us, you're always happy to take emails.
And we're always looking for partners, scientists, researchers, students who are interested in
engaging with us. We are a member society, so we have a very active grassroots program.
And right now our biggest thing is members of Congress are going to be back home in the
district in August. So we're organizing congressional meetings, but we're also doing a big op-ed campaign.
There's a lot of, I think,
public engagement opportunities, right?
Does the public really know why these missions are important?
Not just because I think they inspire us all,
and also just kind of, they're awe inspiring.
I want to say awesome, but that sounds too formal.
Awesome in the literal sense, right?
Yes, awesome in the the traditional definition of the original. It's not just that right?
It's also you know thinking about earth science and thinking about I'm sure with the heat waves
Also, the air quality today does not feel great to me personally, but also thinking about natural disasters
I always think that I found myself in a couple of natural disasters
and the fact that I know we have this whole arsenal of
Government agencies working together to kind of problem solve and get information, you know
Literally in your hands in your cell phone quickly
That's when you need it more than ever and you maybe don't realize how important it is until you find yourself in that situation
And so we're gonna be doing an op-ed letter to the editor campaign in August,
really highlighting kind of what these cuts mean, not just to science, but to society as well.
And we're always looking for people to engage with us.
Great. Thank you, Brittany. And for us at the Planetary Society, we have our Save NASA Science campaign, and we have an action hub at planetary.org
slash save hyphen NASA hyphen science.
You can also access it from our homepage.
I wanna thank you both for being part of this discussion
and for your friendship and partnership
throughout this entire process.
Over the next few months, I very much look forward
to working with both of you, and I know Casey does as well.
Thanks.
Thanks, Jack.
Thanks, Casey.
Thanks, all.
We've reached the end of this month's episode of the Space Policy Edition of Planetary Radio,
but we will be back next month with more discussions on the politics and philosophies and ideas
that power space science and exploration.
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