IIRC, their business case doesn't close at Soyuz seat prices.
As I understand it, the Dragon seat prices won't be much cheaper than the Soyuz seat prices... and you have to buy more of them at the same time. Dreamchaser and CST-100 seat prices will be even higher.So, it can't be price.
As I understand it, the Dragon seat prices won't be much cheaper than the Soyuz seat prices...
Pro-rated by 6 passengers, Musk's non-manned freight cost per astronaut comes in at $21m, a hair more than the oft-cited $20m per seat on Souyez.
Who cares how much NASA is paying? It's totally irrelevant to a discussion of a commercial space station. If someone was to approach the Russians with a big enough suitcase of cash tomorrow - big enough to actually increase production of Soyuz, we'd find out how much they could really get seats for and it would almost certainly be less than NASA. Especially if they were shopping around for a better price. In any case, the claims of anything like $20M/seat for Dragon/CST-100/Dreamchaser are outdated unsubstantiated wishful thinking. Whatever the price is, the Soyuz will likely be offered for less, even with existing production.
Not likely. The production line of Soyuz is also used by Progress and this really limits Russia in terms of how many flights they can do. i.e. That line is at max and increasing production will take a lot more money than just buying one more.
In reality, the BA330 design is no further than paper (and poorly at that), and he is not ready to purchase any kind of transport.
Question is, what is a "big enough suitcase of cash"?- NASA: We'll pay ~$60M/seat, with a sovereign guarantee of 6 seats/yr for X years.- Bigelow: We'll pay ~$25M/seat, with no guarantee (but trust us, there's a great up-side).Which would you choose?
If Roscosmos has limited resources (which they do) and has to decide to put money on one or the other based on risk, they're most likely to choose NASA.
p.s. NASA is buying 6 Souyz seats/yr, at least through 2016.