Nasa picks Bezos’ Blue Origin to build lunar landers for moonwalkers

19 May 2023, 19:04

NASA Selects Blue Origin for Astronaut Mission to the Moon
NASA Selects Blue Origin for Astronaut Mission to the Moon. Picture: PA

Blue Origin will use its still-in-development New Glenn rocket to launch its lunar missions from Cape Canaveral.

Jeff Bezos’ rocket company has won a Nasa contract to land astronauts on the Moon, two years after it lost out to SpaceX.

Blue Origin received a 3.4 billion (£2.7 billion) contract on Friday to lead a team to develop a lunar lander named Blue Moon.

It will be used to transport astronauts to the lunar surface as early as 2029, following a pair of crew landings by Elon Musk’s SpaceX.

Nasa will get astronauts to lunar orbit using its own rockets and capsules, but wants private companies to take over from there.

Nasa Administrator Bill Nelson said the agency wants different landing options as it seeks a return to the moon more than half a century after the end of the Apollo moonshots.

Blue Origin is kicking in billions of dollars, on top of the Nasa contract, to help establish a permanent presence on the Moon.

“We have a lot to do before we successfully land and return astronauts,” said John Couluris, a Blue Origin vice president.

Two years ago, Blue Origin sued after Nasa awarded SpaceX the contract for the first lunar landing. A federal judge upheld the space agency’s decision.

Nasa’s Artemis programme, which follows the 1960s and 1970s Apollo moonshots, kicked off with a successful test flight late last year.

Launched atop Nasa’s new moon rocket, an empty Orion capsule went into lunar orbit before returning home.

SCIENCE Artemis
(PA Graphics)

The next Artemis flight will come late next year when one Canadian and three US astronauts fly to the Moon and back, but not land.

Two Americans would descend to the lunar surface aboard a SpaceX Starship on the mission after that, no earlier than late 2025.

Like SpaceX, Blue Origin plans to practice landing on the Moon without a crew, before putting astronauts on board.

While the shiny, stainless steel Starship has a science fiction look, Blue Moon resembles more of a traditional capsule perched atop a tall compartment with legs. The latter will stand 52 feet on the Moon.

Both companies’ landers are meant to be reusable.

Blue Origin will use its still-in-development New Glenn rocket to launch its lunar missions from Cape Canaveral.

Starship, the world’s largest rocket, made its debut last month from South Texas; the test flight ended in an explosive fireball a few minutes into flight.

Blue Origin’s team includes five partners: Lockheed Martin, Boeing, Draper, Astrobotic Technology and Honeybee Robotics.

Only one other bid was submitted for the contract competition, according to Nasa.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Conception on fire

Captain of scuba dive boat is jailed over blaze which left 34 people dead

Arizona governor Katie Hobbs

Arizona governor repeals 1864 law banning almost all abortions in the state

Joe Biden

Biden: India and Japan are ‘xenophobic’ and do not welcome immigrants

Haitians fleeing gang violence

Gangs lay siege to neighbourhoods in fresh outbreak of violence in Haiti

Joe Biden

Dissent must never lead to disorder says Biden as he hits out at campus protests

Israel Palestinians

Ceasefire question remains: Will Israel end war without destruction of Hamas?

Donald Trump in court

Trump could face further gag order sanctions amid hush money trial

Police raid campus protest site

Police and pro-Palestinian demonstrators clash at UCLA encampment

Japanese helicopter

Collision during night-time drill caused deadly Japanese helicopter crash

Fire in Odesa

Kyiv’s forces ‘face concerted Russian push in eastern Ukraine’

Police enter the encampment

Police begin removing barricades at pro-Palestinian protesters’ site at UCLA

Protesters at UCLA have been detained by police, after a stand-off that lasted many hours

Bear spray fired at riot police as officers clash with pro-Palestinian protesters at US university

Bereaved families

South Korean parliament approves independent probe into Halloween crush

Fumio Kishida

Japanese PM unveils framework for global regulation of generative AI

The statue

Court upholds Italy’s right to seize important bronze from Getty Museum

Demonstrators with Palestinian flag

Pro-Palestinian protesters defy police orders to remain on US campus