The stakes are high for a routine cargo mission to the International Space Station, after a string of failures has left the orbiting outpost running somewhat low on supplies.

Early Friday, an unmanned Russian rocket will lift off with food, fuel and other essentials. The launch comes less than a week after another unmanned rocket from commercial firm SpaceX disintegrated shortly after liftoff.

That was the third failure since October. Normally, the station is stocked with six months of supplies. "Today we're at, give or take, about four months," station manager Mike Suffredini said during a recent NASA press conference.

The situation is still far from a crisis. Astronauts could survive until at least the end of October, and they have a spacecraft docked to the station that could take them home, should they need to leave.

But observers say that any further failures could strain the station's "consumables," the essentials it needs to support life. Three astronauts are currently aboard the station, and three more are set to be added at the end of July. If Friday's launch fails, NASA could delay its plans to put all six crew members aboard, according to Clayton Anderson, a former astronaut who has done a tour on the station.

"If this one doesn't go, I would wait," he says.

A an unmanned rocket built by Orbital Sciences went up in smoke last October.

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Food, water and oxygen are on the short list of things the astronauts need to survive. Oxygen is not an immediate worry. The station has plenty of air and can generate more by breaking down water through electrolysis.

But food and water are trickier. Normally water is carefully conserved by a sophisticated system that lets astronauts recycle things like urine. But the system depends on filters, and those filters are nearly full. Two sets of replacements were lost when the American rockets blew up. And NASA has run out of spares for now. So the astronauts will soon be depending on their water reserves.

Food is that last essential. Right now the supply looks good, but Anderson says the crew may already be thinking about conserving what it has.

In April, a Russian Progress resupply mission tumbled out of control after launch. It never reached the station.

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" 'Don't throw anything away. Let's be a little smarter about this, so we can help the situation out' — that's kind of how astronauts and cosmonauts think," Anderson says.

The loss of the supply rockets has the potential to create other problems, adds Wayne Hale, a former space shuttle manager who was in charge of the first supply mission to the station. One of the biggest might be trash. Twenty years ago, the Russians tried flushing the trash out of the Mir space station. It didn't work: "You had to worry about the trash bags coming back and smacking into your station or somebody else's satellite," Hale says.

So, today astronauts use the cargo capsules that deliver their food and water as trash cans. The one they have right now arrived in February. It might be starting to fill up, Hale says, and that might not be so good for the station.

"You begin to look like one of those houses that a hoarder lives in after a period of time, if you can't get rid of the trash," he says.

This will not be the only opportunity to resupply the station. A Japanese mission is set to fly in August, and a private launch from the American firm Orbital is scheduled for sometime late in the year.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

ROBERT SIEGEL, HOST:

Early tomorrow morning, an unmanned Russian rocket will lift off with supplies for the International Space Station. Such flights had become routine, but there've been three failures in the last eight months. As NPR's Geoff Brumfiel reports, some essentials on the space station are running low.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #1: Four, three, two, one.

GEOFF BRUMFIEL, BYLINE: The bad news began back in October. Just moments after an unmanned rocket lifted off, it exploded. In April, a Russian progress cargo craft made it into space, but when Moscow turned on the cameras, they saw it spinning out of control.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

UNIDENTIFIED MAN #2: Now, the television camera on the progress showed a rather significant spinning - rotational spinning motion.

BRUMFIEL: It tumbled back to Earth without delivering its supplies. Then this Sunday another U.S. rocket disappeared in a cloud of white smoke, just minutes after lift-off. Other cargo ships have made it, but supplies are starting to run low. Normally the space station has provisions for six months, now NASA says, it's down to four. Clayton Anderson has spent time on the space station. He says astronauts will be able to make do without some things.

CLAYTON ANDERSON: You know, you can re-use your underwear as long as you need to, and you can use less toothpaste when you brush your teeth.

BRUMFIEL: But there's a short list of essentials they can't do without.

ANDERSON: Water, oxygen and food.

BRUMFIEL: The station has a good supply of air, so that's not an immediate worry. Normally much of the water is provided by a sophisticated system that lets astronauts recycle things like urine.

ANDERSON: Every time you pee, there can be water created later. And then sweat and condensate and exhalation and all that stuff can be reconstituted into drinking water as well.

BRUMFIEL: But the system depends on filters, and those filters are nearly clogged. Two sets of replacements were on the American rockets that blew up, and NASA has run out of spares for now, so the astronauts will soon be depending on their water reserves. The food supply looks OK at the moment, but Anderson says the crew may already be thinking about conserving what they have.

ANDERSON: Don't throw anything away, let's be a little smarter about this so we can help the situation out. That's kind of how astronauts and cosmonauts think.

BRUMFIEL: Speaking of throwing stuff out, the trash can is something else to think about. Former space shuttle manager Wayne Hale says you can't just flush your garbage out the airlock.

WAYNE HALE: I think back 20-plus years ago, when the Russians had their Mir space station, they used to do some of that and found out it was not really a good plan because then you had to worry about the trash bags coming back and smacking into your station or somebody else's satellite.

BRUMFIEL: So astronauts use the cargo capsules that delivered their food and water as trash cans. The one they have right now arrived in February. It might be starting to fill up, and Hale says that might not be good for the station.

HALE: You begin to look like one of those houses that a hoarder lives in after a period of time if you can't get rid of the trash.

BRUMFIEL: The Russian cargo mission set to launch tomorrow morning will carry three tons of food and supplies to the station. Even if things go wrong, the crew will be fine. They have what they need for the time being, and there's a spacecraft up there that can take them home in emergencies. NASA just hopes it won't come to that. Geoff Brumfiel, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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