NASA Awards More CLPS Contracts, May Send Mars Rover Engineering Model to the Moon

NASA Awards More CLPS Contracts, May Send Mars Rover Engineering Model to the Moon

NASA awarded about $600 million in contracts to three companies today to put robotic landers on the Moon carrying NASA payloads. They are part of NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman’s “Moon Base” effort to send 10 robotic landers to the Moon every year beginning in 2027 during Phase 1 of the Moon Base project. One surprise is that NASA is considering repurposing an existing engineering development model of a Martian rover he calls PROMISE and send that to the Moon as well.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 28-July 4, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 28-July 4, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 28-July 4, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House is in session for part of the week. The Senate is in recess except for pro forma sessions.

Read More Read More

ASAP Worries About ISS, GAO Wonders What Comes Next

ASAP Worries About ISS, GAO Wonders What Comes Next

NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel and the Government Accountability Office are raising concerns about the future of the International Space Station and the pace of efforts to build commercial space stations to replace it. ASAP is cautioning NASA not to cut the ISS budget because managing risks on the aging facility is increasingly difficult.  GAO found that NASA has not made an assessment of the likelihood or duration of a gap between the end of the ISS and the availability of commercial space stations, nor has it documented the process it will use next year to decide whether or not to deorbit the ISS in 2030 as planned.

Read More Read More

NASA IG Cites Dire NASA Launch Infrastructure Needs

NASA IG Cites Dire NASA Launch Infrastructure Needs

A new report from NASA’s Office of Inspector General spells out dire launch infrastructure needs at Kennedy Space Center and Wallops Flight Facility. One solution is for Congress to pass legislation giving NASA authority to receive money from commercial partners for capital infrastructure investments. DOD was given such authority more than a decade ago.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 21-27, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 21-27, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 21-27, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.

Read More Read More

Astrobotic Unveils Griffin “Moon Base II” Lander

Astrobotic Unveils Griffin “Moon Base II” Lander

Astrobotic unveiled its Griffin lunar lander today as it gets ready to ship to JPL for environmental testing prior to launch later this year. When it lands, it will be designated Moon Base II as part of NASA’s evolving Moon Base project. Astrobotic CEO John Thornton was joined by Voyager Space’s Matt Magaña. Voyager announced earlier this month that it is acquiring Astrobotic.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 14-20, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 14-20, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 14-20, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The Senate is in session for part of the week. The House is in recess except for pro forma sessions.

Read More Read More

Isaacman Responds to Criticism of All-Male Artemis III Crew

Isaacman Responds to Criticism of All-Male Artemis III Crew

On social media today, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman defended yesterday’s selection of four men for the Artemis III crew even though almost half of the astronaut corps is female. Stressing the process does not involve any political appointees, he asked that those who were chosen — three from NASA and one from the European Space Agency — be celebrated just as future crews will be.

Read More Read More

Three Americans and a European Named Crew of Artemis III

Three Americans and a European Named Crew of Artemis III

Three NASA astronauts and one from the European Space Agency are the crew of the next Artemis mission, Artemis III. Instead of flying around the Moon like their predecessors, this crew will travel only as far as low Earth orbit. Their assignment is conducting critical rendezvous and docking tests with pathfinder versions of the Human Landing Systems being built by SpaceX and Blue Origin to take astronauts down to and back from the lunar surface in 2028. The companies say they’ll be ready for these tests, which NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said could happen as soon as this time next year.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 7-13, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 7-13, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 7-13, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them.  The House and Senate are in session this week.

Read More Read More