SpaceX is bound for the moon, but 2024 goal is now a long shot

Nasa’s sole choice of Elon Musk’s company for mission has been blamed on budget constraints

Nasa has chosen SpaceX to supply the lander that will take astronauts to the moon as part of the agency’s Artemis programme.

The 16 April announcement came as a surprise because the agency had originally planned to award competitive contracts to two companies. Budget constraints have been blamed for the single-contract award. Congress approved $850m (£609m) for the lander’s development in 2021, which is only about a quarter of Nasa’s request. The SpaceX contract is worth a total of $2.89bn and covers a robotic test flight to the moon’s surface, followed by the human landing.

The lander will be based on SpaceX’s Starship, which has exploded on its previous four test flights. A fifth test flight is expected to take place in the next week, following a successful “static fire” test of Starship SN15 on 26 April at SpaceX’s Boca Chica site. In a static fire test, the rocket is anchored to the ground and the engines are ignited.

The Biden administration has signalled that it will continue the Artemis programme, but the landing date may be later than first hoped. A November 2020 report from Nasa said the agency would be “hard-pressed to land astronauts on the moon by the end of 2024”.

Contributor

Stuart Clark

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Space tourists will have to wait as SpaceX plans bigger rocket
Two people had approached the company about a flight around the moon 50 years after Apollo 8

Stuart Clark

08, Feb, 2018 @9:30 PM

Article image
Spacewatch: Airbus to build three more moon mission modules
Three more European service modules will be made for use as part of Nasa’s Artemis programme

Stuart Clark

05, Feb, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
Spacewatch: Nasa wants $1.6bn next year to get astronauts to moon by 2024
The space agency says it intends to send both a woman and a man on Artemis programme’s first mission

Stuart Clark

16, May, 2019 @8:30 PM

Article image
More than cargo riding on SpaceX launch
Stuart Clark on why it is vital that Elon Musk’s latest resupply mission to the International Space Station goes according to plan

Stuart Clark

07, Apr, 2016 @8:30 PM

Article image
Spacewatch: SpaceX Dragon resupply craft delivers cargo to ISS
New airlock and scientific experiments among cargo delivered to International Space Station

Stuart Clark

11, Dec, 2020 @6:00 AM

Article image
Spacewatch: successful SpaceX test a key milestone for Nasa
Crew Dragon capsule’s abort test means Nasa may return to launching astronauts from US soil as early as spring

Stuart Clark

23, Jan, 2020 @9:30 PM

Article image
How Maven dodged a martian moon
Spacewatch When Nasa realised its spacecraft was on a near-collision course with Phobos, it was time for its first avoidance manoeuvre

Stuart Clark

09, Mar, 2017 @9:30 PM

Article image
Spacewatch: Moon landing contest closes for lack of entrants
Google Lunar XPRIZE withdraws $30m prize for first robotic spacecraft touchdown by private firm as deadline defeats finalists

Stuart Clark

25, Jan, 2018 @9:30 PM

Article image
Spacewatch: Moon-dust explorer

Alan Pickup reports on Nasa's latest lunar-orbiting mission, to be launched next month, that will investigate the Moon's tenuous atmosphere and the dust that would be a hazard for future exploration and exploitation

Alan Pickup

16, Aug, 2013 @8:30 PM

Article image
Nasa invites bids from firms to build lunar lander for 2024 mission
Artemis project aims to create a ‘sustained’ human presence on the moon by 2028

Stuart Clark

03, Oct, 2019 @8:30 PM