Muscat Daily

After Spacex, NASA taps Bezos’s Blue Origin to build Moon lander

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Two years after awarding Elon Musk’s Spacex a contract to ferry astronauts to the surface of the Moon, NASA on Friday announced it had chosen Blue Origin, a rival space company founded by billionair­e Jeff Bezos, to build a second lunar lander.

Blue Origin’s lander was selected for the Artemis 5 mission, currently scheduled to take place in 2029. The company will first have to demonstrat­e it can safely land on the Moon without a crew. Bezos, the founder and former CEO of Amazon, said on Twitter he was ‘honored to be on this journey with @NASA to land astronauts on the Moon - this time to stay’.

The contract amounts to Us$3.4bn, but John Couluris, vice-president in charge of lunar transport at Blue Origin, said during a press conference that the company would itself contribute ‘well north’ of that amount to develop the craft. The Artemis programme marks NASA’S return to the Moon after more than 50 years and is made up of several missions, each with increasing complexity.

In 2021, the US agency chose

Spacex to build a lander for Artemis 3, the first mission in the series to have actual astronauts set foot on the lunar surface.

The contract was worth Us$2.9bn, although Spacex is supplement­ing that amount with its own funding. Blue Origin had also competed for the first contract, and filed an unsuccessf­ul lawsuit against NASA when Spacex was chosen as the sole lander provider.

The space agency had originally intended to offer two contracts, a practice commonly used to guard against the possibilit­y one fails, but said it had been constraine­d by budget concerns.

NASA in 2022 also chose the Spacex lander for its Artemis 4 mission, but at the same time requested submission­s from other companies for the rest of the programme. “We want more competitio­n. We want two landers,” NASA boss Bill Nelson said on Friday. “It means that you have reliabilit­y. You have backups.”

Blue Origin’s lander, dubbed Blue Moon, is being developed with several partner companies, including Draper, Boeing, Astrobotic, Honeybee Robotics, and Lockheed Martin.

The latter will be responsibl­e for developing a crucial element. Once in lunar orbit, Blue Moon will need to be refueled before it can descend and collect the astronauts from the surface of the Moon. Therefore Lockheed Martin has to develop a kind of shuttle to refuel Blue Moon around the Moon.

Blue Origin plans to use its New Glenn rocket, which has never flown before, to launch both its lander and this refueling shuttle.

Artemis 4, scheduled for 2028, and Artemis 5 a year later will both land on the Moon, but will first pass through a new space station in lunar orbit, called Gateway, which has yet to be constructe­d.

Artemis astronauts will take off aboard NASA’S Orion capsule, propelled to the Moon by the agency’s new SLS mega-rocket.

Both these elements were tested uncrewed when Artemis 1 took place six months ago, and will be tested with crew during Artemis 2.

For Artemis 3, Orion will dock directly to Spacex’s lander. Two astronauts will then descend on the Moon for about a week, while two others will remain on board Orion.

 ?? (AFP) ?? NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson announces Blue Origin’s role in Artemis V Moon mission, at NASA Headquarte­rs in Washington on Friday
(AFP) NASA Administra­tor Bill Nelson announces Blue Origin’s role in Artemis V Moon mission, at NASA Headquarte­rs in Washington on Friday

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