The NASA Authorization Act of 2026 has been approved, and alongside a directive for NASA to establish a permanent Moon base, the legislation includes language extending the International Space Station to 2032.

The ISS project was set to end in 2030. In 2024, NASA awarded a contract to Elon Musk’s SpaceX to build a tug to de-orbit the outpost by 2030, assuming it lasts that long. By then the complex’s first module will have been in orbit for more than 30 years, and cracks have plagued the structure alongside hardware failures as the laboratory ages. One space agency insider observed that “it’s on its last legs.”

Then again, in a 2024 interview with The Register, ESA astronaut Andreas Mogensen said of the ISS: “I wouldn’t be surprised if we extended it a few years.”

NASA is to begin soliciting proposals for two commercial space stations immediately (Axiom Space and Vast spring to mind), but, mindful of a potential gap, lawmakers have also directed the agency to keep the ISS running for a few more years – certainly until at least one commercial station is launched and capable of taking over ISS operations.

  • burble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 days ago

    The cronyism feels unavoidable right now, but it doesn’t seem like the new stations are as grifty as a lot of other programs across the government. Axiom, Vast, Voyager, and Blue have all been working on their concepts, and even some fabrication, since before this administration, and they aren’t just random new shell corps with like Don Jr as CEO. You could argue that Axiom has a ton of connections to JSC and Blue has some powerful lobbying, but that’s very different from the scams going on in other agencies.