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NASA on May 26, 2026 began buying the hardware it says is needed to lay groundwork for a sustained human presence on the Moon, awarding roughly $900 million to $1 billion in task orders to U.S. commercial firms.
Under the Lunar Terrain Vehicle Services (LTVS) program the agency gave Astrolab about $219 million and Lunar Outpost roughly $220 million to develop competing crewed/autonomous rovers (Astrolab’s CLV-1 and Lunar Outpost’s Pegasus) intended to operate at the lunar south pole with range requirements of about 125 miles and delivery targeted for 2028.
Blue Origin received a Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) cargo task order valued at about $188 million with options worth roughly $280 million to deliver infrastructure, and Firefly Aerospace and other partners were tapped to support drone and delivery work.
NASA said three iterative uncrewed “Moon Base” missions and a series of cargo deliveries are planned this year to begin emplacement of rovers, drones and science payloads near permanently shadowed regions where water ice and near-constant sunlight make long-duration operations possible.
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🕰️ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Friday, May 29, 2026 23:26 UTC
NASA awards nearly $1 billion for Moon hardware
Tuesday, May 26, 2026 22:27 UTC
NASA Unveils Contracts and Timelines for Moon Base







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