NASA unveils $1B moon base push amid cost questions

NASA unveils $1B moon base push amid cost questions

Spread the love

NASA unveiled nearly $1 billion in new moon base contracts Tuesday as its top official called for less reliance on taxpayer funding and a faster path to putting astronauts on Mars.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said Tuesday that America’s space program shouldn’t be “perpetually funded by taxpayers,” even as the agency announced nearly $1 billion in new moon base contracts as part of NASA’s effort to establish the first permanent human outpost beyond Earth and prepare for crewed missions to Mars.

The agency awarded contracts to Blue Origin, Astrolab, Lunar Outpost and Firefly for lunar landers, rovers and drones.

Blue Origin was selected to deliver the lunar terrain vehicles to the surface under a contract valued at $188 million, with an option period worth an additional $280.4 million based on performance.

Astrolab received a $219 million contract and Lunar Outpost a $220 million contract to build the rovers themselves, according to a NASA official at the briefing.

Firefly was selected to deploy NASA’s MoonFall hopping drones, designed to scout landing sites, search for water ice, and establish communications networks around the moon base, though NASA did not disclose the contract’s value.

NASA announced three initial Moon Base missions, with a fourth wave of awards expected in the coming months.

Moon Base One, slated for launch no earlier than fall 2026, will use Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mark 1 Endurance lander to deliver payloads to the lunar south pole. Moon Base Two, planned for later in 2026, will deliver more than 1,100 pounds of cargo including a rover to mature lunar terrain vehicle operations. Moon Base Three, also planned for 2026, will fly on Intuitive Machines’ Nova-C Trinity lander carrying scientific instruments and payloads from the European Space Agency and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute.

Isaacman cast the moon base as a proving ground for Mars, saying it would be better to master the skills for deep space exploration when four days from Earth rather than months away.

The moon base will unfold in three phases, with the first running through 2029 and focused on cargo delivery and lunar surface technology testing. Phase two will introduce permanent infrastructure, including a power grid, and phase three will culminate in what NASA projects as a permanent human presence spanning hundreds of square miles at the lunar south pole.

NASA’s Artemis architecture relies heavily on commercial partnerships – a model Isaacman said is intended to eventually shift portions of lunar transportation and infrastructure away from direct federal funding.

The moon base is designed to support NASA’s broader Artemis program, which successfully sent four astronauts on a crewed lunar flyby mission in April during Artemis II. Artemis III, which will land astronauts on the lunar surface for the first time since 1972, is targeted for launch in mid-2027. NASA is working with both Blue Origin and SpaceX on lander concepts for that mission.

The space agency provided no total cost estimate for the broader Moon-to-Mars program. NASA previously described the lunar base initiative as a $20 billion effort over seven years, but agency officials Tuesday offered no total projected cost for the broader Moon-to-Mars campaign.

NASA’s acting inspector general testified before Congress in January 2024 that the Artemis program alone was projected to exceed $93 billion through 2025. The inspector general also estimated the SLS/Orion system would cost at least $4.2 billion per launch for the program’s first four missions, excluding about $42 billion in formulation and development costs accumulated over the previous decade.

The Government Accountability Office has designated NASA’s acquisition management a high-risk area for more than three decades, citing the agency’s persistent challenges limiting cost growth and schedule delays on its most complex programs.

Agency officials offered no updated accounting of taxpayer spending on the lunar-orbiting Gateway station NASA paused earlier this year as it redirected resources toward surface infrastructure. A 2021 contract for Gateway’s living quarters alone was valued at $935 million.

When asked Tuesday how NASA planned to fund the expanded moon base program, Isaacman pointed to a $10 billion appropriation from the Working Families Tax Cut Act, fiscal year 2026 appropriations and the president’s 2027 budget request. He did not provide a total cost estimate for the full Moon-to-Mars program or say what spending ceiling, if any, exists for the effort.

Tuesday’s briefing marks the latest milestone in a program whose costs have drawn scrutiny since its inception. NASA announced the $20 billion moon base plan in March, and in January said it planned to build a nuclear reactor on the moon by 2030 to support Mars missions — also without a cost estimate. A NASA spokesperson said at the time that funding for the nuclear project was part of ongoing agency budget work. Tuesday’s briefing offered no update on that figure either.

The briefing comes amid significant uncertainty over NASA’s budget. The White House has proposed cutting the agency from $24.4 billion to $18.8 billion – a 23% reduction – while the House has advanced legislation keeping funding flat. The Republican chairman of the House Science Committee said the White House proposal “simply” could not support Trump’s own exploration goals.

Meanwhile, NASA’s fiscal year 2027 budget request shows $2.6 billion still allocated for Gateway through 2029 under the Working Families Tax Cut Act, even as the agency publicly redirected those resources toward the moon base. The Senate is expected to take up its own NASA spending bill in June.

The funding uncertainty comes as the United States and China race to land astronauts on the moon.

Isaacman told lawmakers in April that the competition would be decided “in months, not years,” and warned that China aims to reach the lunar surface before the end of the decade.

NASA reorganized its mission directorates earlier this month to accelerate the effort, consolidating its human spaceflight and space operations offices and naming Carlos García-Galán, moon base program manager within the Human Spaceflight Mission Directorate, to lead the effort.

NASA envisions a future where astronaut crews arrive at the lunar surface twice a year, with mission durations increasing as lunar infrastructure expands — until, García-Galán said, “we’re permanently here and we’re not giving it up.” What that future will ultimately cost American taxpayers, no one at Tuesday’s briefing would say.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Law firm: California's gender policies violate Constitution

Law firm: California’s gender policies violate Constitution

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square A law firm is putting California Attorney General Rob Bonta on notice about keeping parents in the dark about their children's gender transitions. Liberty Justice...
Group challenges gender policies in New Mexico schools

Group challenges gender policies in New Mexico schools

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square As New Mexico students continue to rank among the lowest in the nation in academic proficiency, some parents are questioning why gender ideology has become...
Supreme Court rules for Texas in Rio Grande River lawsuit

Supreme Court rules for Texas in Rio Grande River lawsuit

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court has handed Texas a win in a lawsuit first brought by Gov. Greg Abbott when he was attorney general. Abbott was...
Trump appoints housing regulator as acting spy chief

Trump appoints housing regulator as acting spy chief

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump on Tuesday named Federal Housing Finance Agency Director William Pulte as acting director of national intelligence, placing a housing-finance regulator with no...
Mullin defends $118B Homeland Security budget request

Mullin defends $118B Homeland Security budget request

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square Markwayne Mullin, secretary for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, defended the agency’s $118.3 billion budget request Tuesday. Mullin, a former U.S. Senator from Oklahoma,...
Bill loosens in-state tuition requirements

Bill loosens in-state tuition requirements

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Some students from outside the Land of Lincoln may soon pay in-state tuition at Illinois public universities...
Illinois Quick Hits: Nine arrested during Naperville teen gathering

Illinois Quick Hits: Nine arrested during Naperville teen gathering

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Naperville Police say they arrested nine people and issued almost three dozen citations after large groups of...
Rubio provides few answers to Congress on Iran conflict timeline

Rubio provides few answers to Congress on Iran conflict timeline

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square With the U.S.-Iran conflict approaching the 100-day mark, Secretary of State Marco Rubio defended the Trump administration’s military strategy before a committee of U.S. lawmakers...
Pritzker housing proposal partly stalls amid overreach concerns from localities

Pritzker housing proposal partly stalls amid overreach concerns from localities

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Though the entire affordable housing initiative from Gov. J.B. Pritzker didn’t make it through the General Assembly...
HUD shifts $4B homelessness program from 'Housing First' to treatment

HUD shifts $4B homelessness program from ‘Housing First’ to treatment

By Tim ClouserThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced a $4 billion funding opportunity for homelessness services on Monday, shifting away from the Housing First...
Poll: Democrats hold slight edge over Rogers in Michigan U.S. Senate race

Poll: Democrats hold slight edge over Rogers in Michigan U.S. Senate race

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square New polling in Michigan's open U.S. Senate race shows each of the leading Democrat candidates narrowly ahead of Republican Mike Rogers in potential general election...
Swipe fee battle continues after delay, court ruling

Swipe fee battle continues after delay, court ruling

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois is still waiting to benefit from a law promised to generate hundreds of millions of dollars...
Walz appoints members to Operation Metro Surge 'Truth Council'

Walz appoints members to Operation Metro Surge ‘Truth Council’

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz has appointed members to a new council tasked with documenting the impacts of Operation Metro Surge and Operation PARRIS, two federal...
$45M included in budget for previously unfunded property tax relief

$45M included in budget for previously unfunded property tax relief

By Sean Reed | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Included in the recently passed state budget, the Illinois State Board of Education will get money for...
Over one ton of cocaine seized at U.S.-Mexico tunnel bust

Over one ton of cocaine seized at U.S.-Mexico tunnel bust

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Border Patrol agents in Southern California have found another underground cross border tunnel, leading to the arrest of four men and the seizure of enough...