Las Vegas Review-Journal

Spacex picked to build lunar lander, on verge of crew launch

- By Marcia Dunn

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA chose Spacex on Friday to build the lunar lander that will eventually put the first woman and person of color on the moon.

The announceme­nt came a few hours after Spacex’s most internatio­nal crew of astronauts yet arrived in Florida for a liftoff next week.

Elon Musk’s Starship — the futuristic, shiny steel rocketship that’s been launching and exploding in Texas — beat out landers proposed by Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Dynetics, a subsidiary of Leidos. The contract is worth $2.89 billion.

“We won’t stop at the moon,” said NASA’S acting administra­tor Steve Jurczyk. Mars is the ultimate goal, he told reporters.

NASA declined to provide a target launch date for the moon-landing Artemis mission, saying a review is underway. The Trump administra­tion had set a 2024 deadline, but on Friday, NASA officials called it a goal.

“We’ll do it when it’s safe,” said Kathy Lueders, who leads NASA’S human space exploratio­n office.

She indicated NASA and Spacex are shooting for later this decade. The astronauts will fly to the moon on the Nasa-launched Orion capsule, then transfer to Starship in lunar orbit for the ride down to the surface and back.

NASA has said at least one of the first moonwalker­s since 1972 would be the first woman on the moon. Another goal of the program, according to the space agency, is to send a person of color to the lunar surface.

On Friday, Jurczyk greeted the four astronauts arriving at Kennedy Space Center for Spacex’s third crew launch in less than a year. By coincidenc­e, their flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station is set for next Thursday — Earth Day. It’s a reminder of NASA’S core mission of studying the home planet, Jurczyk said.

The three men and one woman represent the U.S., France and Japan: NASA’S Shane Kimbrough and Megan Mcarthur, Thomas Pesquet and Akihiko Hoshide, all experience­d space fliers.

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