- NASA unveils more lunar missions aimed at South Pole development
- Commercial companies are awarded large contracts for lunar surface systems
- Blue Origin, Astrobotic, Astrolab and Lunar Outpost secure major roles in NASA’s lunar economy plans
During a recent event at NASA headquarters in Washington, the agency announced new contracts for lunar rovers and cargo landers bound for the Moon.
NASA shared launch timeframes and upcoming milestones for the first Moon Base infrastructure missions to the Moon’s South Pole region ahead of Artemis astronaut landings.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman stated that every mission, manned and unmanned, will be a learning opportunity as they return to the lunar surface and build infrastructure to stay there permanently.
NASA outlines the initial Moon Base mission sequence
According to NASA, this will be America’s and humanity’s first outpost on another celestial world.
NASA announced the first three Moon Base missions to begin building sustained operations on the moon’s south polar region over the coming years.
Moon Base I is scheduled for launch no earlier than fall 2026 with Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mark 1 Endurance lander to successfully deliver NASA payloads.
Moon Base II is scheduled for launch later this year and will deliver more than 1,100 pounds of cargo to Astrobotics’ Griffin lander, including Astrolabs’ FLIP rover system.
Moon Base III is also scheduled for this year and will fly the first payload selected through NASA’s Payload and Research Studies on the Surface of the Moon initiative program.
NASA has awarded Astrolab $219 million and Lunar Outpost $220 million to build and deliver the first phase of Lunar Terrain Vehicles (LTVs) under the CLPS initiative program.
Astrolab’s Crewed Lunar Vehicle, adapted from the company’s FLEX architecture, is a manned rover designed to transport astronauts and carry supplies for remote surface operations.
Lunar Outpost’s Pegasus is a lighter mission-ready evolution of its Eagle rover designed explicitly to meet NASA’s updated manned LTV requirements for lunar mobility.
Deploying multiple LTVs early in Moon Base development will expedite technology demonstrations, inform site planning, and reduce operational risk ahead of manned Artemis missions.
NASA’s lunar economy exists only on paper for now
To deliver these rovers to the Moon’s South Pole region, NASA awarded Blue Origin $188 million with an option period of $280.4 million for a total of two task orders.
When asked about timelines for permanent habitation, García-Galán, the Moon program manager, said Phase 2 would introduce a pressurized rover that would allow astronauts to live and work on the surface during short stays.
He acknowledged that the difficulty lies in the fact that the Apollo program and other robotic missions explored only a fraction of the moon’s surface.
This means that there are great unknowns about terrain, water displacements and radiation hazards.
However, NASA will send astronauts on increasingly difficult missions to explore more of the Moon for scientific discovery and economic benefits.
NASA is committing nearly a billion dollars across these contracts, but the promised financial benefits remain speculative with no guarantee of realization.
The agency is betting that something of value will be discovered along the way, but that bet rests on great unknowns.
So far, the lunar economy exists only in presentations and press releases, not on the Moon’s surface.
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