The billionaire space race heats up! Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos’s lunar landers will go


The billionaire space race is entering a tense new stretch, as Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos vie to win a coveted moon landing contract.

Musk’s SpaceX and Bezos’ Blue Origin could go head–to–head in a 250–mile–high contest to secure their spot in NASA‘s first lunar landing in 50 years.

Both companies have been contracted to develop lunar landers, and NASA now plans to put the two in direct competition during next year’s Artemis III mission.

Whichever lander impresses NASA’s bosses the most will secure a spot in history as the first private company to put humans on the moon.

Following a shakeup of the Artemis timeline, Artemis III will not be a moon landing as previously planned, but a low–Earth orbit test of NASA’s landing technology.

The mission will practice docking the Orion crew capsule, which will carry astronauts to the moon’s orbit, with the lander that will take them down to the lunar surface during the 2028 Artemis IV mission.

SpaceX had originally been contracted to provide its Starship Human Landing System (HLS) for the first landing, but ongoing delays at Musk’s space company prompted NASA to invite other bidders in October last year.

The space agency now says that ‘one or both’ of the landers will be involved in Artemis III, putting Musk and Bezos in a straight race for the moon.

The billionaire space race is entering a tense new stretch, as Elon Musk (pictured) and Jeff Bezos race to win NASA's moon landing contract

The billionaire space race is entering a tense new stretch, as Elon Musk (pictured) and Jeff Bezos race to win NASA’s moon landing contract 

SpaceX was contracted to provide its Starship Human Landing System (pictured) for NASA's first moon landing in 50 years

SpaceX was contracted to provide its Starship Human Landing System (pictured) for NASA’s first moon landing in 50 years 

Blue Origin and SpaceX’s moon landers compared 
  Blue Origin – Blue Moon  SpaceX – Starship Human Landing System 
Contract value $3.4 billion $2.89 billion 
Crew capacity  100 
Cargo capacity  30 tonnes  200 tonnes 
Height  16 m (52 ft)  52.3 m (172 ft) 
Diameter  3.08 m (10.1 ft)   9 m (30 ft) 
Fuel mix  Methane and oxugen  Hydrogen and oxygen 

Although SpaceX and Blue Origin both had contracts from NASA to develop a lander, Bezos’ Blue Moon lander was originally meant to serve later Artemis missions.

However, NASA now says it is ready to test whichever landers are ready when Artemis III comes around in 2027.

The spacecraft will be tested for life support functions, propulsion, and communication systems before a trial docking with Orion, which NASA says will ‘put the landers through their paces’.

SpaceX won a $2.89 billion contract to develop Starship, an enormous reusable, methane and oxygen–powered lander.

The craft is designed to land vertically, much like SpaceX’s reusable booster rockets, before lowering the crew to the ground with a ‘space elevator’.

During Artemis IV, if selected, Starship will carry only four astronauts, but it has the potential to carry a crew of 100 and up to 200 tonnes of cargo.

Blue Moon, on the other hand, is more similar to the style of lander used during the Apollo moon missions.

The craft is powered by a mix of liquid hydrogen and oxygen and would be carried into space on Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket.

Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin space company is also racing to build a lunar lander. NASA now says both companies' offerings could be tested during the Artemis III mission in 2027

Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin space company is also racing to build a lunar lander. NASA now says both companies’ offerings could be tested during the Artemis III mission in 2027 

Blue Origin's Blue Moon lander (pictured) was meant to service later Artemis missions, but it could take astronauts to the moon during Artemis IV if NASA bosses are impressed by the craft's performance

Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lander (pictured) was meant to service later Artemis missions, but it could take astronauts to the moon during Artemis IV if NASA bosses are impressed by the craft’s performance

The new Artemis timeline

  • Artemis II: April 2026, lunar flyby (completed) 
  • Artemis III: 2027, low–Earth orbit test flight
  • Artemis IV: 2028, lunar landing
  • Artemis V: 2028, lunar landing  

Blue Moon is also much smaller than Starship, with a capacity for just four astronauts and a 30–tonne payload.

NASA paid a fixed price of $3.4 billion to Blue Origin to develop the craft, but the company also contributed its own funds to the project bringing to total cost to around $7 billion.

While SpaceX had a considerable head start, the race is now becoming much closer than Musk might have hoped.

Starship has been tested 11 times, with most of the trials ending in explosive disaster, and the rocket is yet to achieve a stable orbit.

Successful launches in August and October last year demonstrated booster separation and mock satellite deployment, but Musk recently announced that the next test would be delayed until mid–May without further explanation.

Meanwhile, Blue Origin recently posted a video showing the Endurance lander undergoing thermal vacuum chamber testing in preparation for spaceflight.

Blue Origin’s chief executive, David Limp, wrote in a post on X that the test brought the lander ‘one step closer to the moon!’

Later this year, the company plans a Blue Moon ‘Pathfinder Mission’ that will land near the moon’s south pole.

While SpaceX has faced serious delays, Blue Moon has just completed thermal vacuum chamber testing in preparation for spaceflight

While SpaceX has faced serious delays, Blue Moon has just completed thermal vacuum chamber testing in preparation for spaceflight

The lander will test its engines, communications, and life support systems, as well as deliver three tonnes of scientific and technological cargo for NASA ahead of the 2028 moon landing.

Amit Kshatriya, NASA’s associate administrator, told The Telegraph: ‘There’s a Blue Origin lander that just came out of the chamber and that’s getting shipped to Florida.

‘I know the folks in Boca Chica are getting the block three Starship ready to roll. They’re going to do static fires here shortly in April and hopefully get off relatively soon. So we’re in earnest, and proceeding as quickly as we can.’

NASA says that the lander that is either ready in time or performs best during the Artemis III trials will be selected to carry humans to the lunar surface during Artemis IV in 2028.

However, the space agency says that Artemis V, a second lunar landing later that same year, could be provided by the company that wasn’t selected for the first mission.

The European Space Agency (ESA) is also developing its own lander design, dubbed Argonaut, which will likely be ready during the early 2030s.

Argonaut is intended to help NASA with the construction of a moon base in service of the agency’s goal of a permanent human presence on the lunar surface.

NASA plans to build an outpost near the moon’s south pole, where frozen water and valuable mineral resources can be found.

WILL HUMANS BE BORN ON THE MOON ‘IN A FEW DECADES’?

Children will be born on the moon ‘in a few decades’, with whole families joining Europe’s lunar colony by 2050, a top space scientist has claimed.

Professor Bernard Foing, ambassador of the European Space Agency-driven ‘Moon Village’ scheme, made the comments.

He said that by 2030, there could be an initial lunar settlement of six to 10 pioneers – scientists, technicians and engineers – which could grow to 100 by 2040.

‘In 2050, you could have a thousand and then… naturally you could envisage to have family’ joining crews there, he told AFP.

Speaking at this year’s European Planetary Science Congress in Riga, Latvia, Professor Foing explained how humanity’s moon colonies could quickly expand.

He likened human expansion on the moon to the growth of the railways, when villages grew around train stations, followed by businesses.

Potential moon resources include basalt, a volcanic rock that could be used as a raw material for 3D-printing satellites.

These could be deployed from the moon at a fraction of the cost of a launch from high-gravity Earth.

The moon also houses helium-3, a rare isotope on our planet, that could theoretically be used to generate cleaner, safer nuclear energy for Earth.

One of the main targets for moon colonies is water, locked up in ice on the moon’s poles.

Water can be separated into hydrogen and oxygen, two gases which explode when mixed – providing rocket fuel.



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