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On March 24, 2026 NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced a major overhaul of the Artemis programme at an ‘Ignition’ event in Washington, pausing the Lunar Gateway orbital station and redirecting its hardware toward a permanent surface base.
The agency unveiled a three‑phase, roughly $20 billion plan to establish a sustained lunar outpost — with Phase 1 focused on repeatable robotic deliveries through 2028, Phase 2 on semi‑habitable infrastructure, and Phase 3 on permanent habitats by the early 2030s.
Isaacman confirmed an accelerated launch cadence after Artemis III, moving to annual landings and a goal of one landing every six months after Artemis V. The briefing also announced Space Reactor‑1 “Freedom”, a 20 kWe nuclear‑electric demonstration spacecraft targeted to leave for Mars by 2028 carrying a multi‑rotor “Skyfall” scouting payload.
NASA said Gateway components already built — including ESA’s HALO module and partner contributions from Japan and Canada — would be repurposed where possible, but the move leaves roles for international partners and contractors unresolved.
Officials acknowledged tight timelines and dependence on commercial landers and congressional budgets.






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