JAN 25, 2024
RELEASE 24-010
The Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP), an advisory committee that reports to NASA and Congress, issued its 2023 annual report Thursday examining the agencyâs safety performance,
accomplishments, and challenges over the past year.
The report highlights 2023 activities and observations on NASAâs:
In 2023, NASA continued to make meaningful progress toward meeting the intent of the broad-ranging recommendations the panel made in 2022. As a result, the ASAPâs latest report includes
information on the advances NASA made in its operations, decision-making, program and personnel management, and the tasks that remain.
âThis report reflects the panelâs strong emphasis on strategic-level aspects of NASA leadership, risk management, and safety culture â a primary focus over the past two years â while
also giving attention to the tactical level of technical execution. We believe that the principles and processes the agency employs to evaluate and make decisions, manage programs, and communicate to its workforce have a direct and consequential impact on
safety and mission assurance,â said Dr. Patricia Sanders, ASAP chair. âWe also highlight some steps that the Congress can take to assist NASA in safely accomplishing its challenging mission.â
The report highlights the progress made toward top recommendations offered in 2022, including the establishment of a Moon to Mars Program Office, as well as the NASA 2040 new agencywide
initiative to operationalize the agencyâs vision and strategic
objectives across headquarters and centers.
Furthermore, this report addresses safety assessments for both the Moon to Mars Program and the operations â current and future â in low Earth orbit. It also touches on relevant areas
of human health and medicine in space, regulatory requirements for commercial space operations as they affect NASA, and the impact of budget constraints and uncertainty on safety.
The 2023 report provides details on the concrete actions the agency should take to fulfill the 2022 recommendations. It spotlights recommendations for the agency moving ahead, including
the establishment of a comprehensive International Space Station to Commercial low Earth Orbit destination transition plan.
The report is based on the panelâs 2023 fact-finding and quarterly public meetings; direct observations of NASA operations and decision-making; discussions with NASA management, employees,
and contractors; and the panel membersâ past experiences.
Congress established the panel in 1968 to provide advice and make recommendations to the NASA administrator on safety matters after the 1967 Apollo 1 fire claimed the lives of three
American astronauts.
For more information about the ASAP, view the 2023 report or reports from previous years, visit:
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