Title 42The Public Health and WelfareRelease 119-73

§18353 Maintenance of the United States segment and assurance of continued operations of the International Space Station

Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 159— - SPACE EXPLORATION, TECHNOLOGY, AND SCIENCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - CONTINUATION, SUPPORT, AND EVOLUTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION › § 18353

Last updated Apr 6, 2026|Official source

Summary

NASA must keep the U.S. part of the International Space Station safe, working well, and fully used through at least September 30, 2030. As soon as possible after October 11, 2010, NASA must do a full review of the key modules, systems, structure, and permanent science equipment on the station (including partner hardware). The review must find what spare or replacement items are needed to keep the station fully functional and useful for science through September 30, 2020. NASA must use existing data and make any new analysis needed. Within 90 days after October 11, 2010, NASA must send Congress a report that lists which spares already exist or are on order (their readiness and delivery plan and basic specs), and which spares do not yet exist (their specs, cost estimates, and expected schedule). The report must also give a delivery schedule and say whether the needed launch vehicles are available and likely to meet that schedule. Within 90 days after NASA’s report, the Comptroller General must send Congress an evaluation of the review, and NASA must let the Comptroller General monitor and join the work. Research facilities for non-exploration science on the station must be planned and managed under separate rules, and exploration-related research must be run so it does not interfere with that planning. NASA must fly the Launch-On-Need shuttle mission listed in the Shuttle flight manifest dated February 28, 2010, during fiscal year 2011 but not before June 1, 2011 unless an operations emergency requires an earlier launch. This flight is subject to a safety assessment by the NASA Engineering and Safety Center and a decision that considers ISS supply needs. Authorized funds may be used for that mission. NASA must keep shuttle launch capability through fiscal year 2011 so the missions and main payloads on the February 28, 2010 manifest can still fly. NASA may not cancel contracts needed to adapt shuttle-derived hardware for use on the planned crew vehicle or the Space Launch System.

Full Legal Text

Title 42, §18353

The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC

(a)The Administrator shall take all actions necessary to ensure the safe and effective operation, maintenance, and maximum utilization of the United States segment of the ISS through at least September 30, 2030.
(b)(1)The Administrator shall, as soon as is practicable after October 11, 2010, carry out a comprehensive assessment of the essential modules, operational systems and components, structural elements, and permanent scientific equipment on board or planned for delivery and installation aboard the ISS, including both United States and international partner elements, for purposes of identifying the spare or replacement modules, systems and components, elements, and equipment that are required to ensure complete, effective, and safe functioning and full scientific utilization of the ISS through September 30, 2020.11 See References in Text note below.
(2)In carrying out the assessment, the Administrator shall assemble any existing data, and provide for the development of any data or analysis not currently available, that is necessary for purposes of the assessment.
(c)(1)(A)Not later than 90 days after October 11, 2010, the Administrator shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the assessment required by subsection (b).
(B)The report required by this paragraph shall include, at minimum, the following:
(i)A description of the spare or replacement modules, systems and components, elements, and equipment identified pursuant to the assessment that are currently produced, in inventory, or on order, a description of the state of their readiness, and a schedule for their delivery to the ISS (including the planned transportation means for such delivery), including for each such module, system or component, element, or equipment a description of—
(I)its specifications, including size, weight, and necessary configuration for launch and delivery to the ISS;
(II)its function;
(III)its location; and
(IV)its criticality for ISS system integrity.
(ii)A description of the spare or replacement modules, systems and components, elements, and equipment identified pursuant to the assessment that are not currently produced, in inventory, or on order, including for each such module, system or component, element, or equipment a description of—
(I)its specifications, including size, weight, and necessary configuration for launch and delivery to the ISS;
(II)its function;
(III)its location;
(IV)its criticality for ISS system integrity; and
(V)the anticipated cost and schedule for its design, procurement, manufacture, and delivery to the ISS.
(iii)A detailed summary of the delivery schedule and associated delivery vehicle requirements necessary to transport all spare and replacement elements considered essential for the ongoing and sustained functionality of all critical systems of the ISS, both in and of themselves and as an element of an integrated, mutually dependent essential capability, including an assessment of the current schedule for delivery, the availability of delivery vehicles to meet that schedule, and the likelihood of meeting that schedule through such vehicles.
(2)(A)Not later than 90 days after the submittal to Congress under paragraph (1) of the assessment required by subsection (b), the Comptroller General of the United States shall submit to the appropriate committees of Congress a report on the assessment. The report shall set forth an evaluation of the assessment by the Comptroller General, including an evaluation of the accuracy and level of confidence in the findings of the assessment.
(B)The Administrator shall provide for the monitoring and participation of the Comptroller General in the assessment in a manner that permits the Comptroller General to prepare and submit the report required by subparagraph (A).
(d)Utilization of research facilities and capabilities aboard the ISS (other than exploration-related research and technology development facilities and capabilities, and associated ground support and logistics), shall be planned, managed, and supported as provided in section 18354 of this title. Exploration-related research and technology development facilities, capabilities, and associated ground support and logistics shall be planned, managed, and supported by the appropriate NASA organizations and officials in a manner that does not interfere with other activities under section 18354 of this title.
(e)(1)The Administrator shall fly the Launch-On-Need Shuttle mission currently designated in the Shuttle Flight Manifest dated February 28, 2010, to the ISS in fiscal year 2011, but no earlier than June 1, 2011, unless required earlier by an operations contingency, and pending the results of the assessment required by paragraph (2) and the determination under paragraph (3)(A).
(2)The Administrator shall provide for an assessment by the NASA Engineering and Safety Center of the procedures and plans developed to ensure the safety of the Space Shuttle crew, and alternative means of return, in the event the Space Shuttle is damaged or otherwise unable to return safely to Earth.
(3)The determination of the schedule and payload for the mission authorized by paragraph (1) shall take into account the following:
(A)The supply and logistics delivery requirements of the ISS.
(B)The findings of the study required by paragraph (2).
(4)Amounts authorized to be appropriated by section 101(2)(B) 1 shall be available for the mission authorized by paragraph (1).
(f)(1)The Administrator shall take all actions necessary to preserve Space Shuttle launch capability through fiscal year 2011 in a manner that enables the launch, at a minimum, of missions and primary payloads in the Shuttle flight manifest as of February 28, 2010.
(2)The Administrator may not terminate any contract that provides the system transitions necessary for shuttle-derived hardware to be used on either the multi-purpose crew vehicle described in section 18323 of this title or the Space Launch System described in section 18322 of this title.

Legislative History

Notes & Related Subsidiaries

Editorial Notes

References in Text

Reference to September 30, 2020, referred to in subsec. (b)(1), was not amended by section 114(b) of Pub. L. 114–90, which substituted references to “2024” for references to “2020” in other provisions throughout this subchapter. See also section 70907 of Title 51, National and Commercial Space Programs, as amended by section 114(b) of Pub. L. 114–90. section 101(2)(B), referred to in subsec. (e)(4), is Pub. L. 111–267, title I, § 101(2)(B), Oct. 11, 2010, 124 Stat. 2809, which is not classified to the Code.

Amendments

2022—Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 117–167 substituted “
September 30, 2030” for “
September 30, 2024”. 2015—Subsec. (a). Pub. L. 114–90, § 114(b)(2)(A), substituted “through at least
September 30, 2024” for “through at least
September 30, 2020”. Subsec. (b)(1). Pub. L. 114–90, § 114(b)(2)(B), substituted “The Administrator” for “In carrying out subsection (a), the Administrator”.

Reference

Citations & Metadata

Citation

42 U.S.C. § 18353

Title 42The Public Health and Welfare

Last Updated

Apr 6, 2026

Release point: 119-73