NASA-Boeing Lunar Lander Procurement Bid Under Investigation: Report

Boeing tried to revise and resubmit its bid, marking a potential violation of procurement procedures.

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By Agence France-Presse | Updated: 18 November 2020 10:58 IST
Highlights
  • Loverro wanted to know whether Boeing would seek to challenge decision
  • Ultimately, NASA chose three finalists - SpaceX, Blue Origin and Dynetics
  • NASA told that they are confident in the integrity of HLS procurement

The affair led to the abrupt resignation of the head of NASA's human exploration directorate in May

NASA's inspector general and the US justice department have launched investigations into allegations that Boeing may have benefited from internal information provided by the space agency during a contract bidding process, the Washington Post reported Tuesday.

The affair led to the abrupt resignation of Doug Loverro, then the head of NASA's human exploration directorate, in May.

At the time, it was known that his departure was linked to a procurement process, but the details weren't clear.

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According to the Post, Loverro called the senior vice president of Boeing's space and launch division Jim Chilton in February to inform him that the company was going to lose a contract to build a lander for the Artemis programme to return to the Moon.

Loverro wanted to know whether Boeing would seek to challenge the decision, potentially holding up the award by months at a time the agency was trying to meet a timeline of reaching the lunar surface by 2024.

Boeing then tried to revise and resubmit its bid, a potential violation of procurement procedures, the Post said, quoting anonymous sources. 

Ultimately, NASA chose three finalists: SpaceX, a team led by Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin, and defense contractor Dynetics.

"The agency is confident in the integrity of the HLS (Human Landing Systems) procurement," NASA told AFP.

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"Mr. Loverro was not the selection official, and his resignation has no impact on the performance of these HLS contracts."

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The Department of Justice did not reply to a request for comment.

"We don't have any further comment on this story," a Boeing spokeswoman said.


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Further reading: NASA, Boeing, Artemis, SpaceX, Blue Origin
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