National Post

Will President Trump make the moon great again, too?

Belt-tightening could park NASA a while

- Sarah Kaplan

It will be difficult to tear your eyes away f rom t he drama unfolding on Earth in 2017. But what might Donald Trump mean for Americans in space?

Traditiona­lly, transition­s are a time to set new destinatio­ns. When President Obama took office, he axed the Constellat­ion program, which would have sent astronauts to the moon, and set his sights on Mars. NASA has been working toward a human mission to the Red Planet with a pit stop at an asteroid, though the agency looks unlikely to meet its 2030s deadline at current levels of funding.

Trump’s election could signal a pivot back to the moon — a destinatio­n historical­ly favoured by Republican­s. During the campaign, Trump offered few specifics about his vi- sion for NASA but said the agency should focus on exploring deep space and being “inspiratio­nal.” A new moon mission would meet those criteria. It would be an infrastruc­ture project for the ages, one that fit with Team Trump’s nostalgia for bygone moments of Amer- ican “greatness.” Plus, there is internatio­nal interest in building a lunar base, and studies suggest that such a base could be a ( comparativ­ely) cheap way station en route to Mars.

NASA has already been working on a heavy- lift Space Launch System rocket and Orion crew capsule — spacecraft that could be retooled for a potential moon mission. If t he moon is Trump’s goal, we might expect to hear about it during his first 100 days, when most presidents set their agendas.

Then again, the presidente­lect’s emphasis on reining in the budget might mean that NASA goes nowhere in the next four years. Funding for the agency has historical­ly tracked with overall nondefence discretion­ary spending, which Trump plans to cut to historic lows. Even if most of NASA’s budget stays intact, there’s a good chance the space agency’s Earthobser­ving programs will be slashed — bad news for climate scientists, meteorolog­ists and others who rely on data from NASA satellites.

The year could also be big for private space explorers. Moon Express has permission to launch a commercial lunar lander; if it happens, it will be the first private mission to ever leave Earth’s orbit. SpaceX is slated to shuttle astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station — the first crewed space station launch from U. S. soil in years. And Blue Origin (whose owner, Jeff Bezos, also owns The Washington Post) is racing to catch up; the company wants to put astronauts in space by the end of the year.

A scientist would caution against drawing conclusion­s without data, and Trump hasn’t given us much data to work with. For now, spacewatch­ers will have to do what they have always done: wonder what’s out there as they contemplat­e the chilly unknown.

THERE IS INTERNATIO­NAL INTEREST (IN) A LUNAR BASE.

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