mbi-logombi-logombi-logo-mobilembi-logo-mobile
  • Home
  • Agriculture
  • Business
  • Energy & Mining
  • Food
  • Healthcare
  • MPR News
  • National News
  • Retail
  • Tourism
✕
To bolster affordable housing, Met Council turns to the sun
May 7, 2021
Minnesota's child care providers still facing uncertainty despite strong state support, survey finds
May 7, 2021

NASA's new chief big on climate, hedges on 2024 moon landing

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA’s new administrator is big on tackling climate and diversifying the agency’s workforce, but hedging on whether the U.S. can put astronauts on the moon by 2024.

In his first interview since becoming NASA’s top official this week, former Sen. Bill Nelson told The Associated Press on Friday that tracking climate change is a top issue. He also wants to diversify the space agency’s workforce so it reflects America.

As for landing astronauts on the moon, Nelson said the goal remains 2024, a deadline set by the Trump administration. But he said he needs more time to review the matter, especially with a contract protest over the lunar lander for astronauts.

“We all know that space is hard,” he said, noting there are often delays developing new technologies. “But the goal is 2024.”

His underlying vision for NASA: “to explore the heavens with humans and machines.”

Nelson said he did not seek the NASA administrator job and had recommended three women to lead the space agency. He said he told the Biden administration he would accept the nomination only if one of the women could serve as his deputy. Selected for the job: former space shuttle commander Pam Melroy.

Nelson, 78, is NASA’s 14th administrator, the third to fly in space and the first to grow up in the shadow of rockets. He was sworn in Monday by Vice President Kamala Harris, who will head the National Space Council. In a show of bipartisan space support, the two previous administrators took part in the ceremony, representing the Obama and Trump administrations.

Nelson steps into NASA’s top job after 44 years of public service, 42 of them in an elected public office.

Nelson grew up near Cape Canaveral, graduating from high school a year before Mercury astronaut Alan Shepard became the first American in space 60 years ago this week. He went on to law school and served in the U.S. Army Reserve during the Vietnam War. After a few terms in the Florida legislature, Nelson, a Democrat, won election to Congress, first in the House and then the Senate, before a 2018 defeat ended his political career.

It was while Nelson was a congressman that he rocketed into orbit aboard space shuttle Columbia in January 1986 — just two weeks before Challenger’s astronauts perished during liftoff.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Share

Related posts

March 24, 2023

Minnesota lawmakers likely to spend $100 million on broadband. How far will that go?


Read more
March 24, 2023

Settlement will wipe $6 billion in student loan debt — but not for these borrowers


Read more
March 21, 2023

Lawmakers consider influx of cash for Minnesota cities, counties facing inflation


Read more
✕

CATEGORIES

  • Agriculture
  • Announcements
  • Business
  • Business Focus
  • Energy & Mining
  • Featured
  • Food
  • Healthcare
  • MPR News
  • National News
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Tourism

OUR MAGAZINE

Minnesota Business Insights is the premiere business web, digital and print media publication, built for entrepreneurs, visionaries, builders, and doers who are committed to growing the economy of the great state of Minnesota.

LATEST POSTS

  • Trump kicks off 2024 with a lifeless stump speech, folding indictment hysteria into a growing list of grievances
    March 26, 2023
  • Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick takes credit for arranging Trump's debut 2024 campaign rally: 'I picked Waco'
    March 25, 2023

ADVERT

© 2020 Minnesota Business Insights. All Rights Reserved.