The Daily Beast
NASA / NASA via Getty Images NASA’s plan to return humans to the Moon by 2028 is facing fresh uncertainty after a government audit warned that delays in developing next-generation spacesuits could derail the timeline. A report from NASA’s Office of Inspector General found that the agency is struggling to deliver the critical suits needed for astronauts to walk on the lunar surface safely. Development schedules have already slipped by more than a year, and auditors warned that key testing milestones could be pushed as far out as 2031—three years after NASA’s target Moon landing. The suits are a central requirement for the Artemis program, replacing outdated equipment used on the International Space Station and far more advanced than Apollo-era designs. NASA has turned to the private sector, including Axiom Space, to develop the new systems after another contractor withdrew, leaving Axiom as the sole provider. But auditors caution that relying on one contractor increases risk for NASA’s broader return-to-the-Moon ambitions. The findings come as NASA pushes ahead with its Artemis program, which aims to return astronauts to the lunar surface for the first time since 1972. Read it at The Daily Mail Read more at The Daily Beast.
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