NASA has made another bold bet on the nation’s commercial space industry, this time asking private companies to provide a lunar rover that can survive for up to a decade near the South Pole of the Moon.
The space agency on Wednesday announced the selection of three teams, led by Intuitive Machines, Lunar Outpost, and Venturi Astrolab, to work on designs for a rover that can be used by astronauts and function autonomously when no crew is around.
Each company will work with the space agency for the next year or so to reach what is known as a “preliminary design review” for their vehicle. The initial awards are not huge; each is a few tens of millions of dollars. But this work will set the stage for a demonstration phase, which will be worth significantly more.
After this initial design work is complete, NASA will select at least one, or potentially more, companies to press ahead with a demonstration of their rover on the lunar surface later this decade or in the early 2030s.
“I’d like to send all three to the Moon,” said Lara Kearney, manager of the Extravehicular Activity and Human Surface Mobility Program at NASA’s Johnson Space Center. “But the decision will be budget driven. If all I can afford is one, we’ll have one.”
It’s likely to be a frenetic year for the three competitors.
Asking a lot
There is a lot of money at stake. NASA is purchasing these rovers as a service and will issue task orders on an annual basis for 10 years. Over the lifetime of the contract, there is a combined maximum potential value of $4.6 billion for all awards. NASA would like the lunar rovers delivered to the Moon prior to the Artemis V mission—currently projected to be the third crewed flight to the Moon. The nominal date of this lunar landing is 2029, but that is likely optimistic.

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