katero
Jun 30, 2026

NASA unveils four new missions to help make its ambitious moon base plans happen

NASA is ramping up its efforts to establish a sustained human presence on the moon—including potentially shifting resources away from its efforts to explore Mars.

On Tuesday, the space agency announced that three companies have been selected to receive a total of $600 million to land four missions on the lunar surface in late 2028. The companies—Astrobotic, Firefly Aerospace and Intuitive Machines—are charged with landing crucial NASA science payloads that the agency says will help it build a permanent base on the moon’s surface. Astrobotic will conduct two of the four missions, according to NASA.

“We’re building a proving ground for Moon Base operations,” said Ryan Stephan, NASA’s Moon Base acting director of cargo landers, in a statement. “Accelerating our Moon mission ordering cadence and launch opportunities enable us to move quickly to learn, iterate, and improve.”


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But before humans return to Earth’s largest satellite, NASA administrator Jared Isaacman said the agency could launch its first robotic lunar rover. While other countries, including Japan and India, have successfully landed rovers on the moon in recent years—and others have tried and failed—NASA has never managed the feat.

To finally achieve the milestone, Isaacman said the agency could repurpose a rover that was originally supposed to go to Mars. The Polar Rover for Observation, Mapping, and In-Situ Exploration (PROMISE), was initially destined to join Curiosity and Perseverance on the Red Planet, but now may finally be put to use on the moon instead.

“We are thinking very hard right now about sending PROMISE to the moon,” said Isaacman at a press event on Tuesday announcing the missions.

The four endeavors are part of a grand overhaul of NASA's lunar ambitions since Isaacman took the helm at NASA in December of last year. In an executive order issued that month, the Trump administration instructed the space agency to focus its energies on the moon, setting goals such as landing people on the lunar surface by 2028 for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972, and initiating construction on a permanent crewed base by 2030.

That order sparked NASA's new, ambitious multi-stage plan. In March, Isaacman unveiled a $30-billion roadmap to speed up lunar landings and help get the base under way. A key lynch pin is the agency's Artemis IV mission, in which NASA astronauts will land on the moon for the first time in more than 50 years. It has no definite launch date, but NASA is aiming for a launch in the first half of 2028. Then, NASA wants to be able to ferry astronaut crews to a semi-permanent base on the lunar south pole by 2032. The final stage involves establishing a permanent outpost, complete with power from a nuclear reactor, by 2036.

All told, the plan will involve 79 launches, 73 lunar landers, 10 moon buggies and multiple drones, various habitat modules and other pieces of infrastructure.

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