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Interpret the Blame responsibility and causation in your own words in the light of Columbia Accident.

User Oberthelot
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Proposed Improvements and Generic Lessons

Within 2 h of losing the signal from the returning spacecraft, NASA’s Administrator established the Columbia Accident Investigation Board (CAIB) to uncover the conditions that had produced the disaster and to draw inferences that would help the US space program to emerge stronger than before (CAIB, 2003). Seven months later, the CAIB released a detailed report that included its recommendations (Starbuck and Farjoun, 2005).

The CAIB (2003) report attempted to seek answers to the following four crucial questions:

1.

Why did NASA continue to launch spacecraft despite many years of known foam debris problems?

2.

Why did NASA managers conclude, despite the concerns of their engineers, that the foam debris strike was not a threat to the safety of the mission?

3.

How could NASA have forgotten the lessons of Challenger?

4.

What should NASA do to minimize the likelihood of such accidents in the future?

Although the CAIB’s comprehensive report raised important questions and offered answers to some of them, it also left many major questions unanswered (Starbuck and Farjoun, 2005).

1.

Why did NASA consistently ignore the recommendations of several review committees that called for changes in safety organization and practices?

2.

Did managerial actions and reorganization efforts that took place after the Challenger disaster contribute, both directly and indirectly, to the Columbia disaster?

3.

Why did NASA’s leadership fail to secure more stable funding and to shield NASA’s operations from external pressures?

By examining, with respect to the Columbia disaster, the case of NASA as an organization, one can try to extract generalizations that could be useful for other organizations, especially those engaged in high-risk activities—such as nuclear power plants, oil and gas, hospitals, airlines, armies, and pharmaceutical companies—and such generic principles may also be salutary for any kind of organization.

The CAIB (2003) report recommended developing a plan to inspect the condition of all RCC systems, the investigation having found the existing inspection techniques to be inadequate. RCC panels are installed on parts of the shuttle, including the wing leading edges and nose cap, to protect against the excessive temperatures of reentry. They also recommended that taking images of each shuttle while in orbit should be standard procedure as well as upgrading the imaging system to provide three angles of view of the shuttle, from liftoff to at least SRB separation. “The existing camera sites suffer from a variety of readiness, obsolescence, and urban encroachment problems.” The board offered this suggestion because NASA had had no images of the Columbia shuttle clear enough to determine the extent of the damage to the wing. They also recommended conducting inspections of the TPS, including tiles and RCC panels, and developing action plans for repairing the system. The report included 29 recommendations, 15 of which the board specified must be completed before the shuttle returned to flight status, and also made 27 “observations” (CAIB, 2005).

User Engilyin
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