Russian space chief says Russia will no longer sell rocket engines to the US
New York (CNN Business)Russia's space agency, Roscosmos, will no longer deliver Russian-made rocket engines to the United States, Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin said on state television, ending a decades-long relationship between US and Russian rocket makers.
"Today
we have made a decision to halt the deliveries of rocket engines
produced by NPO Energomash to the United States," Rogozin said,
according to the Russian news site Tass. "Let me remind you that these deliveries had been quite intensive somewhere since the mid-1990s," Rogozin said.
Tass reported that the ban will apply to RD-180 engines that power US-based United Launch Alliance's (ULA) Atlas V rockets.
ULA's CEO, Tory Bruno, however said via Twitter that ULA has already taken delivery of the RD-180s it needs in the near-term, and he does not foresee the fallout from Russia's invasion of Ukraine having any impact on ULA's operations.
ULA,
a private space transport company, is in the process of abandoning its
line of Atlas rockets in favor of a new line of rockets, called Vulcan,
that will use engines made by Jeff Bezos' US-based rocket company Blue Origin. It's not clear when that rocket will be ready to fly.
The
ban also applies to RD-181 engines that are used on Northrop Grumman's
Antares rockets, according to Russian state media. Those rockets are
used to power uncrewed resupply missions to the International Space
Station. Northrop Grumman did not immediately respond to requests for
comment.
"As
of today, there were plans to deliver an additional 12 RD-181 engines
in 2022-2024 and talks were also held with the United States on the
delivery of RD-181M engines with improved operational characteristics,
but we believe that in this situation we can no longer supply the United
States with our best engines," the Roscosmos head said.
The
US does have other means of getting cargo to and from the space
station. SpaceX's Dragon spacecraft are frequently used for that
purpose.
"Let them fly on something else, on their brooms," Rogozin told a Russian TV station Thursday.
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