
NASA’s imaginative and prescient for a future, long-term sustained presence on the Moon gained extra readability on Tuesday because the company introduced a sequence of contract awards for future robotic missions.
The company introduced that two corporations creating lunar terrain automobiles (LTVs), Astrolab and Lunar Outpost, would every be receiving contracts valued at about $220 million every to complete their designs and get them to the Moon’s floor.
Astrolab’s Crewed Lunar Automobile (CLV-1) takes after its unique design, known as FLEX, and Lunar Outpost’s Pegasus car takes heritage from its earlier Eagle design. NASA beforehand put out a name for LTVs that will be able to surviving on the Moon for as much as 10 years, however revised its necessities to have extra available choices to enhance earlier astronaut missions.
Related to that, NASA additionally awarded the LTV supply contract to Blue Origin, utilizing it’s Blue Moon Mark 1 lander in a contract that’s price $234 million for every LTV delivered.
“For the reason that starting, Blue Origin has been dedicated to Lunar Permanence,” wrote Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp in a put up on X. “Thanks, @NASAadmin, for sharing that imaginative and prescient. We’re able to make it a actuality.”
The announcement got here throughout a information convention at NASA’s headquarters in Washington D.C.. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman mentioned these and different upcoming missions, scheduled to start within the again half of 2026, that can lay the early floor work for an everlasting presence on the Moon’s South Pole.
“As we introduced through the Ignition occasion, we intend to take an iterative strategy, sending a requirement sign to trade for lots of landers and rovers and tech demonstrations and all of the scientific payloads these missions can accommodate,” Isaacman mentioned.
“We’re leveraging the NASA playbook from the Sixties, determining what works and what doesn’t on this epic science of survival as a result of the Moon Base is as lovely as it’s hostile.”
In these early days of crewed landings through the Artemis period, LTVs will want be deployed at a protected distance from the Human Touchdown System (HLS) landers being supplied by SpaceX and Blue Origin. They are going to kick up fairly a little bit of lunar regolith throughout their touchdown burns, which might harm an LTV if it’s too shut.
“Defending for [plume surface interaction], we plan to maintain the LTVs roughly 2 km away when the landers land,” mentioned Ryan Stephan, NASA’s appearing director for cargo landers. He beforehand served because the Business Lunar Payload Companies (CLPS) Technical Deputy primarily based at Glenn Analysis Middle.
“They’ll traverse in, have the ability to choose up the crew, after which do missions as much as like 10 km through the crewed interval after which uncrewed, like Carlos mentioned, a complete of like 400 km all through the lifetime.”
Moon Base Program Govt Carlos García-Galán mentioned NASA envisioned footprint of the Moon Base to be “tons of of sq. miles with totally different belongings, all constructing as much as the target of everlasting lunar presence on the Moon.”

The primary piece of the pie, dubbed Part One, extends from now by 2029 and was the main target of Tuesday’s briefing. Along with the lander and rover contracts introduced, García-Galán additionally unveiled Firefly Aerospace because the recipient of a $75 million subcontract awarded by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory to deploy a sequence of lunar drones on the MoonFall mission.
Throughout this expertise demonstration, which is able to happen in 2028, considered one of Firefly’s Elytra Darkish spacecraft will fly to the Moon over the course of 45 days earlier than it enters lunar orbit. It’ll then de-orbit and deploy the drones about 50 km above the Moon’s South Pole.
These hopper drones are designed to final one lunar day (14 Earth days) and can take a look at out the essential expertise in addition to performing imaging and scouting for future websites of curiosity.
“Excessive-resolution imagery throughout all mission phases, together with the deployment, the touchdown, and nominal operations of staying in-situ or hopping round,” García-Galán mentioned. “It’ll proceed picture gather throughout an prolonged mission and it’ll analyze totally different websites for unprecedented element and mainly permitting us to construct our understanding of soil mechanics, the terrain, the lighting circumstances in-situ of wherever we need to go.”
The MoonFall drones also can have the potential of organising what García-Galán known as a “Moon Base perimeter” that will go on the corners of areas “the place we expect we now have both key scientific aims or we need to construct up the Moon Base.”
Requested whether or not such a fringe would act as a keep-out zone for nations not social gathering to the Artemis Accords, an settlement for Deep House finest practices and understanding, Isaacman mentioned it lent to the significance of reaching the Moon first earlier than nations that the U.S. sees as adversaries, like China.
“I feel the concept that there are areas of nice curiosity on the lunar floor, we do need to get there and discover them and we additionally clearly need to be very conscious of the Outer House Treaty, in order that we’re respectful of different nations which are placing belongings on the lunar floor and we’d anticipate that to be reciprocal,” Isaacman mentioned.
Three missions that have been previously a part of the unique CLPS program have been redesigned as Moon Base Missions 1-3:
- Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mk.1 – Fall 2026
- Astrobotic’s Griffin-1 – late 2026
- Intuitive Machines’ IM-3 – late 2026
