Wednesday, March 25, 2026

NASA revamps its explorations plans

Plus: SES orders 28 satellites from K2 Space
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03/25/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In this today's edition: NASA's new lunar base and commercial space station plans, SES orders 28 K2 Space satellites, geopolitical threats and opportunities for satellite operators and more.


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Top Stories


NASA rolled out a major revamp of its exploration plans Tuesday, including development of a lunar base. At a day-long event at NASA Headquarters, agency leaders discussed changes to its Artemis architecture that include halting work on the lunar Gateway. In its place, NASA proposed spending $20 billion over the next seven years to start development of a lunar base, including landers, rovers and other infrastructure. The base would leverage some existing programs, although with modifications, along with new projects. NASA also proposed increasing the cadence of crewed and robotic lunar lander missions and developing a nuclear electric propulsion demonstration mission that would launch to Mars in late 2028. [SpaceNews]


NASA also proposed changing its approach to commercial space station development. Agency officials said the commercial market for such stations was not developing as fast as previously projected, raising concerns about the business case for them. NASA said it is considering a new model where NASA would procure a core module that would be installed on the ISS, providing a more incremental path to creating commercial space stations. NASA also plans to allow more private astronaut missions to the ISS to stimulate demand. [SpaceNews]


SES has ordered an initial 28 satellites from manufacturing startup K2 Space for a future medium Earth orbit (MEO) constellation. SES said Tuesday the meoSphere satellites would deliver high-speed broadband, support optical intersatellite links for data relay and enable hosted payloads across commercial and government missions. SES is co-developing meoSphere with K2, providing payloads built in Luxembourg for integration with K2's satellite bus in California. SpaceX is slated to launch an initial SES-K2 meoSphere pathfinder March 30 on a rideshare mission. The pathfinder, which at 2,200 kilograms would be the same size as the operational spacecraft, includes optical technology designed primarily to test links between satellites and an optical ground station supplied by France's Cailabs. [SpaceNews]


The Space Development Agency is slowing the pace of satellite launches as it works through technical issues with spacecraft already in orbit. Gurpartap "GP" Sandhoo, the agency's acting director, said at Satellite 2026 this week the next launch of the Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture's Tranche 1 satellites will not occur until at least May or June, marking a gap of roughly seven months since the last launch in mid-October. He said the pacing factor is now the work required to bring satellites into operational use, including raising them to final orbits, checking out systems and demonstrating early integration. So far, 42 of the 154 satellites planned for Tranche 1 have been launched, all for the Transport Layer providing communications. [SpaceNews]


Geopolitical shifts are creating new opportunities but also new challenges for satellite operators. As countries increasingly prioritize national security and sovereignty, satellite operators are being forced to rethink a historical push toward globalized supply chains in favor of less efficient, more regionally aligned models. That pressure to adapt is matched by a surge in demand tied directly to geopolitical tensions as space becomes an increasingly strategic domain. That surge in national security demand, though, brings new risks to operators as they potentially become targets. [SpaceNews]


Electronic warfare is a growing threat to U.S. space systems. During a threat briefing at Satellite 2026, U.S. Space Force Chief Master Sergeant Ron Lerch, senior enlisted advisor to the Deputy Chief of Space Operations for Intelligence, said China and Russia are developing electronic warfare technologies, such as jamming satellite communications services with drones. Another recent Chinese research paper described a high-power ground-based microwave to target satellites. [SpaceNews]


Other News


A Russian Progress cargo spacecraft docked to the ISS Tuesday. The Progress MS-33 spacecraft, called Progress 94 by NASA, docked with the station's Poisk module at 9:40 a.m. Eastern. Russian cosmonauts on the ISS handled the docking manually after one of the antennas for the spacecraft's automated docking system failed to deploy after launch on Sunday. [NASA]


Weather postponed a Rocket Lab launch of European navigation satellites. Rocket Lab said it called off the Electron launch from its New Zealand spaceport, scheduled for early this morning, because of poor weather that is expected to last several days. Rocket Lab did not announce a new launch date for the mission, carrying two Celeste navigation tech demo satellites for the European Space Agency. [X @RocketLab]


Chinese launch startup Astronstone has secured new funding as it builds toward the first flight of its reusable AS-1 rocket. The company said it raised a "Pre-A+" funding round involving a mix of financial, state and industrial capital, bringing its total raised to date to $72 million. The funding will be used for rocket final assembly and testing, validation of "chopstick" recovery technology, expansion of rocket production capacity and team growth. Astronstone says it aims for a debut flight of its two-stage AS-1 rocket in the first quarter of 2027. The company claims a capability of 15,700 kilograms to low Earth orbit for AS-1 when expendable, and 10,000 kg when recovered. [SpaceNews]


Moog is buying solar arrays from Redwire. Under the contract announced Tuesday, Redwire will deliver Extensible Low-Profile Solar Array (ELSA) wings for Moog's Meteor satellite bus ordered by an undisclosed national security customer. ELSA, unveiled earlier this month, is designed to provide 50% more power per unit of volume than traditional solar arrays. [SpaceNews]


The Artemis 2 launch could be a windfall for Florida's Space Coast. Local officials estimate the launch, scheduled for as soon as April 1, could attract 400,000 visitors and generate $160 million in economic impact for the region through hotel reservations, dining and other entertainment. The Artemis 1 launch in 2022, by contrast, attracted 100,000 to 200,000 visitors. [Florida Today]


NASA will provide an instrument for a joint Indian-Japanese lunar mission. NASA said it will provide a neutron spectrometer for the Lunar Polar Exploration (LUPEX) mission being developed by ISRO and JAXA. LUPEX will land near the south pole of the moon in 2028 and deploy a rover to identify and characterize water ice. [NASA]


Correction: Yesterday's entry about Mike Melvill incorrectly stated when he piloted SpaceShipOne on two suborbital spaceflights. Those flights took place in 2004.


FROM SPACENEWS

Register to join our virtual conversation on the energy imperative driving the push toward orbital data centers on March 31

March 31 at 1 p.m. ET: Join SpaceNews and Star Catcher, in partnership with the Commercial Space Federation, for a conversation on the energy and computing needs driving the push toward orbital data centers, where there are gaps and where there are opportunities and what comes next in this fast-moving field. Register now.

He's Written the Checks


"I can say, with a lot of direct experience and confidence in my answer, that putting humans into space is extremely expensive."


– NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, who funded and commanded two private astronaut missions before joining NASA, speaking at a press conference about the agency's revamped exploration plans Tuesday.


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Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Satellite Conference 2026: The growing electronic warfare threat

Plus: SDA to slow satellite launch cadence
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SpaceNews coverage from Satellite 2026 in Washington, D.C.

03/24/2026 | READ IN BROWSER


The latest reporting from Satellite x GovMilSpace in Washington, D.C.
At the show? Visit SpaceNews at booth 2926 and meet our team.


SpaceNews is reporting from the 2026 Satellite conference all week. Today, new insight into the threats that have the Space Force's attention, one hurdle facing missile warning systems and Amazon Leo's plan to accelerate launches. Click here to see our full conference coverage.


SPONSORED

The future of space is being built right now — will you be in the room? ASCEND 2026 is where the global space community comes together to turn bold ideas into real outcomes. Bringing together 2,000+ leaders from industry, government, and academia, ASCEND covers everything from space economy and national security to lunar exploration and next-gen technology — across 130 sessions and 190 technical papers. Powered by AIAA and backed by partners including Lockheed Martin and the ISS National Laboratory, this is the event that drives the space sector forward. Secure your seat today Your off-world future starts here.

Space Force officer shares intelligence on threats to space systems

By Debra Werner

Electronic warfare is a growing threat to U.S. space systems, according to a March 23 unclassified briefing by U.S. Space Force Chief Master Sergeant Ron Lerch, senior enlisted advisor to the Deputy Chief of Space Operations for Intelligence.


Space Development Agency slows satellite launches to focus on on-orbit performance

The Space Development Agency is slowing the pace of launches for the Pentagon's Proliferated Warfighter Space Architecture's Tranche 1 low Earth orbit satellite constellation, stepping back from an earlier plan for frequent deployments as it works through technical issues with spacecraft already in orbit.


Fusion engine for missile warning lacks a government dataset

National missile warning and tracking could be improved if all government agencies shared the raw data they gather, which is currently siloed across different departments, systems and classification levels.

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Moog taps Redwire to provide solar arrays for Meteor

Redwire announced the first award for its new solar arrays, a $12.8 million contract from Moog. Under the contract announced March 24, Redwire will deliver Extensible Low-Profile Solar Array wings for Moog's Meteor satellite bus ordered by an undisclosed national security customer.


Amazon Leo targets faster deployment cadence as deadline pressure mounts

Amazon vowed to double the annual launch rate for its low Earth orbit broadband constellation to more than 20 missions, hinging largely on rockets yet to prove themselves at scale.


SES orders 28 satellites from K2 Space for next-gen MEO network

SES has ordered an initial 28 satellites from manufacturing startup K2 Space for meoSphere, a next-generation medium Earth orbit network slated to be in operation by 2030. The Luxembourg-based operator said the satellites would deliver high-speed broadband, support optical intersatellite links for data relay and enable hosted payloads across commercial and government missions.

FROM SPACENEWS

Register to join our virtual conversation on the energy imperative driving the push toward orbital data centers on March 31

March 31 at 1 p.m. ET: Join SpaceNews and Star Catcher, in partnership with the Commercial Space Federation, for a conversation on the energy and computing needs driving the push toward orbital data centers, where there are gaps and where there are opportunities and what comes next in this fast-moving field. Register now.

Subscribe to SpaceNews



NASA revamps its explorations plans

Plus: SES orders 28 satellites from K2 Space ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌...