A Boeing Space Exit Would Be a Win-Win-Win

A true win-win-win situation doesn’t come along often. One could be brewing with a Boeing Co. decision to look at a potential sale — or perhaps more realistically a spinoff — of its space business. The Wall Street Journal reported on Friday that Boeing is considering a sale of the business, though a deal is not guaranteed. Bloomberg News reported that the company is weighing options for its Starliner space capsule program.

Boeing should exit the entire business. The company would win because it would cleave off an operation that has become a drag during a critical time when the planemaker must concentrate on healing its commercial aircraft business; it can’t afford more headwinds or distractions. NASA would be a winner after it has lost some confidence in Boeing after several stumbles with the Starliner. Investors would win if Boeing were to raise cash by selling the unit or from ownership in the spinoff of an established space operation in an era when the commercial space market is in its infancy.

To make the space business work as a carve-out, an infusion of energy and vision is required. Boeing’s space group has a storied past of helping NASA send astronauts to the moon under the Apollo program, which cemented US space dominance. Space activity is now entering an unprecedented phase in which a permanent moon base will be established and companies are spending more for satellites and space services.

“It’s been exciting for those of us who work in this field because we kind of dreamed about this,” said Glenn Lightsey, an aerospace engineering professor at Georgia Tech. “The cost of access to space has gone down dramatically. This has opened up who can participate in space.”

While Boeing is a contractor for NASA’s moon aspirations under the Artemis program, it has stumbled the most on the space agency’s commercial crew program. NASA signed an initial $4.2 billion contract with Boeing in 2014 and a $2.6 billion deal with SpaceX to build systems to launch astronauts to and from the International Space Station and break the dependence on Russian rockets.