The
joint moon lander proposal, led by Blue Origin, marks the
companies' second attempt to win a coveted moon lander contract
as NASA seeks more options for getting astronauts to the lunar
surface under its multibillion dollar Artemis program.
Last year, NASA picked Elon Musk's SpaceX to conduct the first
few Artemis moon landing missions within the next decade,
rejecting a rival bid from a similar Blue Origin-led team
primarily over funding constraints. NASA later opened another
competition seeking a second moon lander to serve as a backup to
SpaceX's.
Blue Origin revealed its team's submission to that second NASA
program in a brief statement posted on its website on Tuesday,
saying "in partnership with NASA, this team will achieve
sustained presence on the Moon."
The deadline for proposals was Tuesday. NASA is expected to make
an award decision in June 2023.
Blue Origin's team also includes spacecraft software firm
Draper, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based Astrobotic and Honeybee
Robotics, a manufacturer of military and civil robotic systems
that was acquired by Blue Origin in January.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; editing by Jonathan Oatis and David
Gregorio)
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