Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

NASA is heading back to Moon in 2028, and this time to stay

- Agence France-Presse letters@hindustant­imes.com

WASHINGTON: NASA is accelerati­ng plans to return Americans to the Moon, and this time, the US space agency says it will be there to stay.

Jim Bridenstin­e, NASA’s administra­tor, told reporters on Thursday that the agency plans to speed up plans backed by US President Donald Trump to return to the moon, using private companies. “It’s important that we get back to the moon as fast as possible,” said Bridenstin­e in a meeting at NASA’s Washington headquarte­rs, adding he hoped to have astronauts back there by 2028.

“This time, when we go to the Moon, we’re actually going to stay. We’re not going to leave flags and footprints and then come home to not go back for another 50 years” he said. “We’re doing it entirely differentl­y than every other country in the world. What we’re doing is, we’re making it sustainabl­e so you can go back and forth regularly with humans.”

The last person to walk on the Moon was Eugene Cernan in December 1972, during the Apollo 17 mission.

Before humans set foot on the lunar surface again, NASA aims to land an unmanned vehicle on the Moon by 2024, and is already inviting bids from the burgeoning private sector to build the probe.

The deadline for bids is March 25, with a first selection due in May, a tight timeline for an agency whose past projects have run years behind schedule and billions over budget. “For us, if we had any wish, I would like to fly this calendar year. We want to go fast,” said Thomas Zurbuchen, associate administra­tor of NASA’s science mission directorat­e. However, he admitted that “we may not be able to”.

NASA’s accelerate­d plans flesh out the Space Policy Directive that Trump signed in 2017.

 ?? AP FILE ?? John Young salutes the US flag at the Descartes landing site on the Moon during the first Apollo 16 extravehic­ular activity in 1972.
AP FILE John Young salutes the US flag at the Descartes landing site on the Moon during the first Apollo 16 extravehic­ular activity in 1972.

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