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A NASA Office of Inspector General audit released in April 2026 says delays in developing next-generation spacesuits could push planned Artemis lunar landings from 2028 to as late as 2031.
NASA in 2022 awarded Exploration Extravehicular Activity Services contracts worth about $3.1 billion to Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace; Collins withdrew in 2024, leaving Axiom as the sole provider.
The OIG found NASA’s firm‑fixed‑price, service‑based acquisition approach was ill-suited to this developmental effort, produced overly optimistic schedules and imposed burdensome requirements that narrowed the vendor pool.
The watchdog flagged technical, schedule and interoperability risks — including incompatible suit interfaces with proposed commercial landers — and noted that the International Space Station will be retired around 2030, tightening the window for in‑space testing.
Axiom disputes the 2031 estimate, saying it plans a 2027 in‑space demonstration and remains committed to supporting a 2028 lunar landing; NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has also expressed confidence.
The report recommends changing acquisition and oversight practices and keeping options open to appoint additional suppliers such as SpaceX, Genesis Engineering Solutions and ILC Dover.







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