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At a March 24 “Ignition” event, NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman outlined a rapid, three‑phase overhaul of the Artemis programme that pauses work on the planned Lunar Gateway and redirects hardware and funding toward a $20 billion permanent lunar base.
The agency said it will accelerate robotic deliveries (up to 15 early landers), build out surface infrastructure in staged phases and aim for more frequent crewed surface missions — targeting at least one landing per year and a six‑month cadence as capabilities mature.
NASA also unveiled Space Reactor‑1 “Freedom,” a demonstration nuclear‑electric spacecraft planned to launch to Mars by 2028 carrying multiple “Skyfall” helicopters.
Artemis II, the first crewed Artemis flight, remains scheduled as a lunar flyby with a launch window no earlier than April 1, 2026; agency teams are conducting final pad preparations and public livestream coverage.
Isaacman framed the shift as driven by geopolitical competition with China and by a push to leverage commercial partners, though industry schedules (notably commercial landers) and partner roles (ESA, JAXA, CSA) face uncertainty as Gateway elements are repurposed.
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Repurposing Gateway components like the PPE could accelerate a nuclear‑electric demonstration, leveraging existing hardware. But NEP’s low thrust creates trade‑offs—best suited to robotic deep‑space missions—not crewed short‑duration transfers—and raises budget, schedule and regulatory challenges.
🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
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