NASA signs $590M in moon deals; total program cost unknown

Spread the love

NASA awarded $590.4 million in new Moon Base lander contracts Tuesday, but the agency has not disclosed what its broader Moon-to-Mars program will cost taxpayers.

It’s a question NASA has not answered for more than a month. Administrator Jared Isaacman gave no total cost estimate at a May 26 briefing despite direct questions from reporters. NASA has also not updated a $20 billion, seven-year cost estimate Isaacman gave in March for building the lunar base alone. That figure does not include the broader Moon-to-Mars program. NASA officials responded to a written question from The Center Square seeking that figure by a June 25 deadline, but didn’t provide an estimate. The total mission’s cost did not come up at Tuesday’s briefing.

A NASA spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment sent Tuesday on the total cost of its Moon-to-Mars program before publication.

NASA selected three commercial space companies Tuesday to deliver four new science payloads to the lunar surface in late 2028. Astrobotic received $297.9 million for two deliveries. Astrobotic is in the process of being acquired by Voyager Technologies in a deal pending regulatory approval and expected to close in July 2026. Firefly Aerospace received $144.2 million and Intuitive Machines received $148.3 million, each for one delivery, NASA officials said.

Each lander will carry three NASA instruments: a camera system that studies how a lander’s engine exhaust disturbs lunar dust, a reflector device used for navigation and a radiation monitor.

The unanswered question comes a week after NASA’s Office of Inspector General reported that contract values on four canceled or repurposed Artemis systems more than doubled, from $2.8 billion to $5.9 billion.

The Government Accountability Office has designated NASA acquisition management a high-risk area for more than 30 years.

The agency’s funding remains contested in Washington. The White House has proposed cutting NASA’s budget 23%, from $24.4 billion to $18.8 billion, while the House has advanced legislation keeping funding flat. U.S. Rep. Brian Babin, R-Texas, chairman of the House Science, Space and Technology Committee, has said the proposal could not support President Donald Trump’s own space exploration goals.

NASA and China are racing to land astronauts on the moon. Isaacman told lawmakers in April the competition could be decided “in months, not years,” and warned that China aims to reach the lunar surface before the end of the decade.

Carlos García-Galán, NASA’s Moon Base program manager, said Tuesday the agency is studying how landers’ engine plumes disturb lunar dust and could damage equipment already on the surface, with multiple landings planned in quick succession. Without intervention, landing sites would need to sit a mile and a half from other equipment, he said.

Isaacman said NASA is also weighing how the human body will hold up in the moon’s gravity, about one-sixth of Earth’s, after decades of research on the International Space Station in microgravity. The work matters for Mars, he said, where a crewed mission could take nine months one way.

“This is the next logical step on the journey,” Isaacman said, “where we should be very grateful we have a moon in such proximity to work with.”

García-Galán said NASA plans to scale its lunar payload capacity over time, from landers carrying 150 to 200 kilograms today to 500 kilograms, then two to three metric tons, and ultimately to Starship-class vehicles capable of carrying roughly 100 metric tons to the lunar surface. A 2024 inspector general audit found delivery costs had already risen to approximately $1.2 million per kilogram, a 20% increase from NASA’s original 2019 estimate.

NASA’s acting inspector general testified before Congress in January 2024 that the Artemis program alone was projected to exceed $93 billion through 2025. The agency has not said how much more the Moon-to-Mars program would add to that figure.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Trump’s Great Healthcare Plan ‘central’ to long-term policy solutions, health sharing ministry says

Trump’s Great Healthcare Plan ‘central’ to long-term policy solutions, health sharing ministry says

By Tate MillerThe Center Square A health sharing ministry is expressing its support for President Donald Trump’s newly announced “Great Healthcare Plan,” stating the plan’s promise of transparency and affordability...
Lake Land College.6

Lake Land College Approves $6 Million Technology Overhaul to Streamline Operations

Lake Land College Board of Trustees Meeting | Dec. 8, 2025 Article Summary: The Lake Land College Board of Trustees approved a major upgrade to the college’s information technology systems,...
Utah County's chief prosecutor testifies at Tyler Robinson's hearing

Utah County’s chief prosecutor testifies at Tyler Robinson’s hearing

By Dave MasonThe Center Square The second in-person pretrial hearing for Tyler James Robinson, charged with the murder of conservative leader and Arizona resident Charlie Kirk, took an extraordinary turn...
Elite private colleges can’t cap off price-fixing collusion class action

Elite private colleges can’t cap off price-fixing collusion class action

By Scott Holland | Legal NewslineThe Center Square A federal judge in Chicago has refused to end an antitrust class action complaint accusing elite universities of colluding in the financial...
WATCH: San Francisco gets $40M to address homelessness

WATCH: San Francisco gets $40M to address homelessness

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square San Francisco is getting new state funding for homelessness and mental health services. Speaking Friday at a San Francisco event titled "Treatments, Not Tents," Gov....
Education dept. launches 18 Title IX probes as Supreme Court hears cases

Education dept. launches 18 Title IX probes as Supreme Court hears cases

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The Trump administration has launched a series of investigations into various public schools and state departments of education across the country over Title IX allegations...
Tyler Robinson's defense seeks to disqualify prosecutors

Tyler Robinson’s defense seeks to disqualify prosecutors

By Dave MasonThe Center Square Attorneys representing Tyler James Robinson, charged with the murder of conservative leader and Arizona resident Charlie Kirk, are trying to disqualify the team of prosecutors....
Casey illinois library.1.logo graphic

Casey Township Library Board Approves Staff Raises and Year-End Bonuses

Casey Township Library Board Meeting | Dec. 18, 2025 Article Summary: The Casey Township Library Board voted to approve hourly wage increases and year-end bonuses for five staff members during...
Illinois Quick Hits: GOP gubernatorial forum set for Monday

Illinois Quick Hits: GOP gubernatorial forum set for Monday

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – All four Republican gubernatorial candidates are scheduled to participate in a forum in East Dundee on Monday....
GOP senators introduce bill to increase penalties for assaulting ICE officers

GOP senators introduce bill to increase penalties for assaulting ICE officers

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Republican U.S. senators, led by U.S. Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, have introduced the ICE Protection Act to increase penalties for those who assault and injure...
Oz: Your zip code will no longer determine your life expectancy

Oz: Your zip code will no longer determine your life expectancy

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square President Donald Trump and senior health administration officials touted the $50 billion set aside in the One Big Beautiful Bill for rural health care during...
Experts dispute Arizona governor's claims about state-funded school choice program

Experts dispute Arizona governor’s claims about state-funded school choice program

By Zachery SchmidtThe Center Square Arizona education experts are pushing back on claims Gov. Katie Hobbs made about the Empowerment Scholarship Account program during her State of the State this...
DOJ claims 'substantial progress' made on Epstein files, but no new releases

DOJ claims ‘substantial progress’ made on Epstein files, but no new releases

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square Four weeks after the congressionally-mandated release deadline, the Department of Justice says it is making “substantial progress” in its review of the millions of remaining...
Trump eyes tariffs to pressure Greenland

Trump eyes tariffs to pressure Greenland

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square President Donald Trump said Friday that he could use tariffs in his bid to annex Greenland, an Arctic island with critical mineral reserves, proximity to...
Group wants records on Minnesota child care assistance program

Group wants records on Minnesota child care assistance program

By Hayley FelandThe Center Square A Washington, D.C.–based oversight organization has formally asked the Minnesota Department of Children, Youth, and Families to provide internal records that relate to the state’s...