โWe are now going to move beyond studying, and we have given direction to go,โ Sean Duffy said.
NASAโs acting administrator Sean Duffy announced that the United States was planning to build a nuclear reactor on the lunar surface as part of the Artemis campaign to return to the moon and stay there.
โWeโre in a race to the moon, in a race with China to the moon,โ Duffy told reporters on Aug. 5. โAnd to have a base on the moon, we need energy, and [in] some of the key locations on the moon, weโre going to get solar power. But this fission technology is critically important.โ
Duffy, who is also the transportation secretary, was named interim administrator of NASA in July after President Donald Trump revoked the nomination of Jared Isaacman, private astronaut and Elon Musk ally, just before the Senate was due to cast its confirmation vote.
Duffy explained during his press conference that the idea of utilizing nuclear power on the moon was not a new concept and had been discussed during Trumpโs first term, as well as under the Biden administration. Hundreds of millions of dollars had been spent studying the idea, and whether it could be done.
โWe are now going to move beyond studying, and we have given direction to go,โ he said. โLetโs start to deploy our technology, to move, to actually make this a reality.โ
The secretary touted NASAโs plans to send the four-person Artemis II on a mission around the moon, and the following mission, Artemis III, will land humans on the lunar surface for the first time since December 1972.
Artemis III will stay there for six days. He also said that the program was behind schedule.
โIf weโre going to engage in the race to the moon and the race to Mars, we have to get our act together,โ he said. โWe have to marshal all of our resources, all of our focus, on going to the moon, which is what weโre going to do.โ
By T.J. Muscaro