×

Congress to weigh extending space station life, NASA moon base

By Thomson Reuters Feb 25, 2026 | 7:25 PM

By Joey Roulette

WASHINGTON, Feb 25 (Reuters) – A U.S. Senate committee next week will consider extending the planned life of the International Space Station by two years to give companies more time to develop a replacement, one of a ​few changes to a NASA bill focused on rivaling China’s growing footprint ‌in space.

The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation plans to take up legislation on March 4 that would amend a NASA authorization bill with the ISS extension, and add a requirement that NASA build a base on the moon’s surface as part of its Artemis program.

The ISS extension, which has ‌bipartisan ​backing from the committee’s chair Ted Cruz and ranking ⁠member Maria Cantwell, is part of ⁠the committee’s focus on rivaling China, as Beijing considers foreign partners on its own Tiangong space station and a 2030 crewed moon landing.

NASA had planned to retire the ISS, which has been in orbit for more than two decades, by ​2030. The proposed extension would set its retirement at 2032.

The ISS has sprung small leaks in recent years that the space agency sees as signs of its age, ⁠as the U.S. private sector increasingly appears capable of ⁠taking over its role.

NASA is funding early company concepts of a ​commercial focused replacement, drawing involvement from firms such as Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin and Voyager. ​But some of those companies have made little progress toward 2030 deployment, ‌raising concerns about a gap in U.S.-crewed activity in low-Earth orbit as geopolitical competition in the domain soars.

The space agency last year tapped Elon Musk’s SpaceX to build a spacecraft that could attach to the ISS and drag it into Earth’s atmosphere for a ⁠controlled destruction, opting against preserving it as an orbital landmark to avoid debris risks and potentially costly maintenance.

Adding the requirement for a moon base to NASA’s authorization would help cement the ⁠agency’s desire to establish ‌a long-term presence on the moon, using that experience as practice ⁠for future missions to Mars.

SpaceX’s CEO Musk expressed his support ​for such ‌an architecture earlier this month after previously advocating for a ​direct-to-Mars space exploration ⁠approach.

SpaceX is developing its Starship rocket to serve as a moon lander under NASA’s Artemis program, alongside Blue Origin’s Blue Moon lander.

NASA has in recent months cultivated an air of competition between the two billionaire-backed space companies to get them to speed up their lunar lander development timelines, as China signals progress in its own lunar program.

(Reporting by Joey Roulette; ​Editing by Michael Perry)