GAO said Monday it found that, although multiple offices within the DoD engage in activities pertaining to commercially hosted payloads, they do so independently, resulting in a fragmented knowledge base that contributed âto resistance within [the agency] to using hosted payloads.â
The congressional watchdog proposed that pertinent programs submit relevant data, such as cost, technical specifications, and lessons learned, to a central office to facilitate the sharing of information.
Although a central repository already exists in the form of the Hosted Payload Office, its establishing directive does not instruct it to coordinate beyond the U.S. Air Forceâs Space and Missile Systems Center, under which the office is organized.
GAO nevertheless recommended that the DoD âconsider whether the [HPO] is the most appropriate office to centralize agency-wide knowledge.â
The agency added that, without access to centralized knowledge, the DoDâs ability to make informed decisions about the viability of using commercial satellites may be limited, and the agency may miss âopportunities to rapidly and affordably address emerging threats in space.â