NASA cancels lunar orbit station, builds $20B Moon base

Engineering challenges loom, but international partnerships will aid in establishing sustainable lunar infrastructure.

NASA cancels lunar orbit station, builds $20B Moon base
NASA cancels lunar orbit station, builds $20B Moon base

NASA is abandoning its plan to deploy a space station in lunar orbit and will instead repurpose its components to build a $20 billion base on the Moon’s surface over the next seven years, announced the agency’s new chief, Jared Isaacman.

Speaking at a day-long event at NASA’s Washington headquarters, Isaacman, who took office in December revealed sweeping changes to the Artemis Moon programme.

“It should come as no surprise that we are pausing Gateway in its current form and prioritising infrastructure to support sustained operations on the lunar surface,” he said.

The Lunar Gateway station, developed largely by contractors Northrop Grumman and Vantor (formerly Maxar), was originally intended as an orbital research hub and transfer point for astronauts heading to the Moon.

Repurposing the existing modules for a surface base presents significant engineering and scheduling challenges.

“Despite the hardware and timeline hurdles, we can adapt equipment and leverage international partnerships to achieve our surface-focused objectives,” Isaacman added.

This strategic shift reshapes billions of dollars in Artemis contracts and accelerates the programme, as NASA races to maintain momentum while China continues progress toward its own 2030 lunar landing.