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NASA Recasts Artemis: 2027 Earth-Orbit Test, First Crewed Moon Landing Now Targeted for 2028

The agency cites risk reduction after ASAP warnings, following recent SLS test anomalies that prompted a rollback for repairs.

Overview

  • Artemis III is redesigned for 2027 as a low-Earth-orbit mission to rendezvous and dock with one or both commercial lunar landers from SpaceX and Blue Origin and to test new spacesuits and critical systems.
  • The first crewed lunar touchdown moves to Artemis IV in 2028, with NASA saying a second landing that year is possible and that it aims for at least annual surface missions thereafter.
  • Artemis II, the next flight, is delayed until at least April after hydrogen leaks and a helium-flow problem; the SLS/Orion stack is back in the Vehicle Assembly Building for fixes and further rehearsal.
  • NASA says the overhaul follows Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel concerns and is meant to standardize SLS configuration, rebuild workforce capability, and raise launch cadence to roughly every 10 months.
  • Commercial landers remain central to the plan as contractor readiness is scrutinized, and scaling the SLS flight rate could be constrained by the limited inventory of RS-25 shuttle-era engines until new units are available.