Work with the European agency will be managed by OHB, while
Israel Aerospace (IAI) will deliver the moon lander, the company
said. It did not disclose financial details, although the
agreement could be worth tens of millions of dollars, according
to a source with knowledge of the deal.
IAI said it will provide a version of the lunar lander it helped
develop for Israeli non-profit venture SpaceIL, which is
preparing for a moon launch next month.
The European mission involves sending landers to the moon to
test technologies for producing oxygen, water and other raw
materials from lunar soil, as well as collect and analyze
samples of the moon's terrain, IAI said.
Such technologies, it added, would be needed for long-term human
colonization away from Earth.
(Reporting by Ari Rabinovitch; Editing by Steven Scheer)
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