NASA says it won’t make lunar landing goal by ’24
NASA made official Tuesday something many in the space industry assumed for years: astronauts will not land on the lunar surface by 2024.
During an update on the agency’s moon-focused Artemis program, Administrator Bill Nelson told reporters the agency will be able to launch astronauts on an orbital mission around the moon, known as Artemis II, by 2024. But the long-mentioned goal of putting two astronauts on the lunar surface (Artemis III) will push to 2025 due to budgets, technical issues, a recently dismissed Blue Origin lawsuit, and the coronavirus pandemic.
“The Trump administration’s target of a 2024 human landing was not grounded in technical feasibility,” Nelson said. “We’ve lost nearly seven months in litigation and that likely has pushed the first human landing to no earlier than 2025.”
On the latter point, Nelson was referring to Jeff Bezos-founded Blue Origin and its recent protest of a $2.9 billion lunar lander contract awarded to rival SpaceX. NASA selected the company’s Starship vehicle to only deliver Artemis astronauts from lunar orbit down to the surface – the agency’s Space Launch System rocket and Orion capsule are responsible for the trip to lunar orbit.
Last week, a federal judge dismissed Blue’s lawsuit and said work between NASA and SpaceX could proceed. Nelson confirmed development has resumed and plans on visiting the company’s Starship production site in South Texas, along with other high-ranking officials, early next year.
Nelson also said Congress carries some of the blame as budgets have been lacking.