NASA is dealing with more and more sharp challenges because it pursues its aim of touchdown astronauts on the moon once more earlier than this decade is out — and because the area company braces for one more management change, it’s clear that the yr forward will even deliver additional challenges. How will NASA fare?
“There’s quite a bit left up within the air, although the indicators are extra optimistic than I’d have stated a few months in the past,” Casey Dreier, chief of area coverage on the nonprofit Planetary Society, stated this week on the ScienceWriters2025 convention in Chicago.
One of many massive points left up within the air has to do with who’ll be on the helm on the world’s main area company. On his first day in workplace, President Donald Trump chose tech billionaire Jared Isaacman to grow to be NASA’s administrator. In Might, Trump withdrew the nomination within the midst of a spat with SpaceX founder Elon Musk — however simply this month, Isaacman’s nomination was revived.
Within the interim, Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was doing double obligation as NASA’s performing administrator — and reportedly making his own pitch to lead NASA. Now the rivalry has apparently been patched over.
Isaacman, who basically created his own space program and has been on two privately funded flights to orbit, obtained largely positive reviews after his first Senate affirmation listening to in April. Dreier stated it’s seemingly that the second listening to, which hasn’t but been scheduled, will even give a thumbs-up to Isaacman’s renomination.
“I feel lots of people see that — given the vary of potential choices, and who’s operating among the different scientific businesses within the authorities proper now — having somebody who doesn’t dislike the company that they wish to run is definitely not dangerous,” he stated.
However Isaacman will nonetheless have issues to reply for. Simply days earlier than his renomination was introduced, Politico obtained a leaked copy of a 62-page report wherein Isaacman laid out his imaginative and prescient for reforming NASA. (It’s thought that the doc, often known as Venture Athena, was leaked by Duffy in hopes of boosting his personal possibilities of getting the job.)
The Venture Athena report suggests shifting some accountability for area science missions from NASA facilities to industrial ventures. It requires taking NASA out of the “taxpayer-funded local weather science enterprise” and leaving it up for academia to check such points. And it raises questions on long-term funding for NASA’s heavy-lift Space Launch System and for a Gateway outpost in lunar orbit.
All these strikes are according to the Trump administration’s price range priorities, however they might not sit nicely with members of Congress whose districts profit from spending on SLS, Gateway and different parts of NASA’s present Artemis moon program.
The report additionally requires NASA to analyze the “relevance and ongoing necessity” of every of greater than a dozen company facilities throughout the nation — together with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, which manages a lot of NASA’s robotic area exploration missions.
“What’s ‘constructed’ at JPL?” Isaacman requested within the report.
After the report was leaked, Isaacman responded to the criticism he was getting in a lengthy posting to the X social-media platform. He stated that the leaked draft was written earlier than his preliminary nomination was withdrawn in Might, and that “components of it are actually dated.” He additionally insisted that his plan “by no means favored anyone vendor, by no means really useful closing facilities, or directed the cancellation of applications earlier than aims have been achieved.”
Isaacman stated the report didn’t particularly name for the SLS rocket program to be shut down, however solely instructed exploring “the potential for pivoting {hardware} and sources to a nuclear electric propulsion program after the aims of the president’s price range are full.”
“It was written as a beginning place to offer NASA, worldwide companions, and the industrial sector the very best likelihood for long-term success,” Isaacman wrote. “The extra I see the imperfections of politics and the lengths individuals will go, the extra I wish to serve and be a part of the answer … as a result of I really like NASA and I really like my nation.”
The Planetary Society’s Casey Dreier, seen on the video display screen, discusses area coverage with Clara Moskowitz of Scientific American at a ScienceWriters2025 session. (Photograph by Alan Boyle)
Dreier stated he supported among the concepts specified by Venture Athena.
“There are components of it that I appreciated … setting these expectations for the efficiency that we have to have so as to do massive issues,” he stated. “I actually suppose nuclear electrical energy is extremely necessary, most likely crucial legacy if he’s capable of transfer that by.”
Dreier stated the truth that Isaacman isn’t a partisan ideologue ought to assist him navigate the slender straits of Senate affirmation.
“He does wish to make NASA higher, and so I’m personally optimistic that he’ll take a few of this suggestions and study from this,” Dreier stated. “However he’ll must most likely make lots of guarantees to not do issues in that doc so as to get confirmed.”
Assuming Isaacman does get confirmed, he’ll must navigate an impediment course in area coverage that’s as difficult as the asteroid field Han Solo faced in “The Empire Strikes Back.” Listed below are a couple of of the questions that the subsequent NASA administrator must resolve:
- How deeply will science be slashed? Trump’s price range request requires reducing NASA’s overall funding by 24% in 2026, and slicing science spending by 47%. If the price range finally ends up being slashed that a lot, dozens of space science projects — together with NASA’s Mars pattern return marketing campaign, the Juno mission at Jupiter and the Nancy Grace Roman House Telescope — must be deserted. Congress isn’t more likely to help cuts that deep, so it will most likely be as much as Isaacman to mediate between Capitol Hill and the White Home.
- How quickly the moon? NASA’s present timeline requires the Artemis 3’s astronauts to set foot on the moon in 2027, however final month Duffy hinted that the schedule was slipping to 2028. He additionally stated NASA may rethink its plan to have SpaceX’s Starship put the primary crew on the lunar floor. “They push their timelines out, and we’re in a race in opposition to China,” Duffy stated. “The president and I wish to get to the moon on this president’s time period, so I’m going to open up the contracts.” In response, SpaceX stated it will create a “simplified” version of Starship for Artemis 3. Wanting forward, Isaacman would play a key function in deciding whether or not to stay with SpaceX or shift to Blue Origin.
- Deal with the moon, or Mars? The Trump administration desires NASA’s Artemis program to place astronauts again on the moon earlier than a Chinese language crew will get there, however Trump is most focused on planting the Stars and Stripes on Mars. SpaceX has talked about sending a robotically controlled Starship to the Red Planet in 2026 or 2028, and though that timeline appears to be like unrealistic proper now, Isaacman simply may discover himself below stress to make it so. The Venture Athena report contains references to a “Project Olympus” that might take a look at applied sciences for touchdown people on Mars.
- What concerning the SpaceX connection? Isaacman labored intently with SpaceX on his two orbital missions and is claimed to have invested tens of millions of dollars within the firm. His first nomination ran aground partly due to issues that his relationship with SpaceX and Elon Musk may pose a battle of curiosity. Throughout final yr’s Senate affirmation listening to, Isaacman took pains to reassure lawmakers about his ties to SpaceX. “NASA is the shopper,” he stated on the time. “They work for us, not the opposite approach round.” Isaacman is certain to be requested concerning the relationship once more throughout the deliberations to return.
Dreier stated he’s anxious about SpaceX’s dominant function in America’s area effort, together with the plan to ship American astronauts to the moon. “In the event you body this as a nationwide area race and as a nationwide aim, we’ve got subsequently put our nation’s repute and objectives within the fingers of actually one firm to ship on that area race,” he stated.
He’s additionally anxious that NASA will tighten its deal with “only one or two celestial our bodies” whereas slicing again on area science typically.
“There’s far more alternatives for engineers, there’s approach fewer alternatives for scientists,” Dreier stated. “Folks discuss, ‘Why do we’ve got NASA when we’ve got SpaceX?’ Present me what number of interplanetary spacecraft SpaceX has constructed. What number of scientific devices have they designed and despatched to Venus, or what have you ever? They may in the event that they needed to, however they don’t, as a result of they’re not focused on that. … The place the scientists go, I truthfully have no idea.”
Alan Boyle was a moderator for this week’s ScienceWriters2025 session on area coverage. He’s additionally a volunteer member of the board on the Council for the Advancement of Science Writing, which was one of many organizers of the convention.