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MOSCOW (Reuters) – Russia will charge U.S. astronauts $51 million per return trip to the International Space Station (ISS) from 2012 and will resume selling seats to space tourists, Russian news agencies reported on Wednesday.
"We've agreed with our American partners the sum of $51m, starting in 2012," Perminov was quoted as saying by Itar-Tass news agency. He did not specify how much astronauts will be charged between 2010 and 2012, but in 2006 Russia charged the United States $21.8 million per return flight to the ISS. Since then the price for of a space tourist ticket to the ISS has climbed to $35 million from $20 million.
Originally posted by denynothing
I guess im lost, but I thought that it was an international project with the space station, does Russia own it? How can we just allow Russia to tell us to pay them everytime we go there unless they own it?
Originally posted by poet1b
What is even more pathetic is that instead of coming out with a new, more advanced space craft, we are going backwards to 1960ties style Apollo craft.
Originally posted by Divinorumus
Personally, I think at this point in time, sending humons into space is crazy and wasteful
Originally posted by denynothing
I guess im lost, but I thought that it was an international project with the space station, does Russia own it? How can we just allow Russia to tell us to pay them everytime we go there unless they own it?
Originally posted by Rockpuck
Originally posted by denynothing
I guess im lost, but I thought that it was an international project with the space station, does Russia own it? How can we just allow Russia to tell us to pay them everytime we go there unless they own it?
That's America paying for some of the costs to get there. Nothing wrong with it, imo.
I do however have a problem with the ISS .. it's pointless, a waste of money, and nothing good has come from it.
In 2008 dollars, the cumulative cost of the Manhattan project over 5 fiscal years was approximately $22 billion; of the Apollo program over 14 fiscal years, approximately $98 billion; of post-oil shock energy R&D efforts over 35 fiscal years, $118 billion. A measure of the nation’s commitments to the programs is their relative shares of the federal outlays during the years of peak funding: for the Manhattan program, the peak year funding was 1% of federal outlays; for the Apollo program, 2.2%; and for energy technology R&D programs, 0.5%. Another measure of the commitment is their relative shares of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) during the peak years of funding: for the Manhattan project and the Apollo program, the peak year funding reached 0.4% of GDP, and for the energy technology R&D programs, 0.1%.
This chart that we have up now shows the total estimated cost for all three of these planes--the F-22, the Super Hornet, and the JSF. That total figure is an astonishing $397 billion.