Saturday, March 28, 2026

Industry says proposed NASA changes to commercial space station plans create confusion

Our coverage of the agency's busy week
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This week, NASA outlined a new direction for exploration in the next decade. These priorities have left members of industry and the agency's civil counterparts around the globe racing to digest the updates and reorient their strategies.


Here's a preview of SpaceNews' latest report on the reaction to some of these changes and a digest of all our coverage this week detailing NASA's announcements.


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Industry says proposed NASA changes to commercial space station plans create confusion


By Jeff Foust


WASHINGTON — NASA's proposed changes to its support of commercial space stations have created concern and confusion among companies developing them, the head of an industry organization warned.


In March 25 testimony at a hearing of the House Science Committee's space subcommittee, Dave Cavossa, president of the Commercial Space Federation, opposed a potential revamp of NASA's plans to shift from the International Space Station to commercial stations announced the day before.


At NASA's "Ignition" event March 24, NASA announced it was considering an alternative approach to what it calls commercial low Earth orbit destinations, or CLDs. Under that new approach, NASA would procure a core module from industry that would be installed on the ISS, to which additional commercial modules could be added. That would form the basis of a commercial station, or stations, that would detach from the ISS.


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NASA said at the event it is considering the new approach because it believes the market for commercial stations is not developing as rapidly as previously expected, and because companies don't have experience with space station operations.


Cavossa, whose organization includes several companies working on commercial space stations, criticized the NASA proposal.


"Yesterday, NASA announced it is considering yet another major change to the Commercial LEO Destination program, sowing concern and, really, sowing confusion among the commercial space companies I represent," he said.


Read the full article.


Catch up on NASA's announcements and the response:


SpaceNews' Orbital Data Centers event series kicks off on Tuesday: Tune in at 1 p.m. ET on March 31 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, with speakers from Star Catcher, Loft Orbital and the Foundation for American Innovation. Register now.



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Opinions: Solving a software blind spot in modern space exploration

Plus: Why AI can't replace boots on the ground
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03/28/2026

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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.

The software behind Artemis, Gateway and America's defense in space deserves its own strategy


The United States is sitting on the potential to set the standards for space operations for the foreseeable future, according to a commentary article by NASA program manager Ashok Prajapati. That's thanks to NASA's Core Flight System (cFS) open-source flight software framework, which plays a role in nearly all major NASA initiatives. To solidify that lead, he wrote, it's time for policymakers, military partners and the broader space ecosystem to leverage NASA technology.


"The United States has an extraordinary opportunity — one that will not remain open indefinitely. As space programs proliferate globally, the nation that establishes the dominant software standard for spacecraft operations gains durable influence over interoperability, mission collaboration and the norms of behavior in space for decades to come," Prajapati wrote. "NASA, through cFS, has built that standard. The world has begun to adopt it."


But, he added, "standards are not self-sustaining," and require "stewardship, sustained development and cross-sector collaboration."


You can read the full article here.

The 'ground truth' gap in AgTech: Why satellites alone can't save supply chains


Earth observation constellations have allowed for greater environmental, agricultural and deforestation monitoring than ever. But an article by MosaiX co-founder and Director of Strategy Priscilla Moulin offers a word of caution: No amount of technology or automation can replace boots on the ground and human intervention.


"Today's orbital tech is incredible, but there are several limitations," Moulin wrote. "AI models are limited by what they're trained on. And while they're excellent at detecting changes in forest cover from satellite imagery, they cannot accurately determine intent or causality, and they don't take into account complex local dynamics or on-the-ground realities."


If the goal is to stop deforestation, overreliance on automated ground coverage alerts could do more harm than good, Moulin argued.


"If a company panics at a false AI alert and immediately cuts ties with a supplier or a smallholder cooperative, the technology has failed its mandate. This path of least resistance — supply chain exclusion — might instantly clean up a corporate spreadsheet and create an illusion of compliance, but it fails to solve the problem."


See the full article here.

Satellite image of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest. Credit: NASA

Satellite image of deforestation in the Amazon rainforest. Credit: NASA

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Industry says proposed NASA changes to commercial space station plans create confusion

Our coverage of the agency's busy week ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌...