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NASA Amending $21 Billion Budget Request To Speed Up Moon Mission

NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine speaks at a House Science, Space and Technology Committee committee meeting March 2, 2009.
House.gov
NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine speaks at a House Science, Space and Technology Committee committee meeting March 2, 2009.

Congress is asking NASA to provide an updated budget request for the next fiscal year. The ask comes after  Vice President Mike Pence charged the agency with landing humans on the moon in 2024 — four years sooner than planned.

NASA administrator Jim Bridenstine says the agency has what it needs to put humans on the moon. That includes a new rocket, crew capsule, launch pad and plans for a space-station around the moon.

“All of those elements are on the agenda for 2028. In order to achieve 2024, we need to take some of those elements and move them forward to achieve that objective,” Bridenstine said at a House Science, Space and Technology Committee meeting Tuesday.

The Trump Administration  submitted a budget request of $21 billion last month — back when the plan was to land on the moon by 2028. Bridenstine says the agency is still calculating how to expedite a faster moon landing.

“What we’re working right now at NASA is compiling the data necessary to come back to this committee, come back to Congress, to amend our budget request.”

It’s unclear how NASA will speed up the mission or how much additional funding it will request.

Committee leaders have asked for the amendment by April 15.

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