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Artemis II Moon Mission
4APR

Budget guts NASA science 47% on splashdown day

2 min read
15:01UTC

The FY2027 budget that celebrates Artemis II simultaneously proposes terminating more than 40 NASA science missions and describes its own launch vehicle as grossly expensive.

ScienceDeveloping
Key takeaway

Exploration funded; science gutted; rocket condemned; the programme retreats as it celebrates.

The FY2027 budget's internal logic is incoherent on its face: it funds Artemis exploration at $8.5 billion, describes SLS as grossly expensive and delayed without naming a commercial replacement, and cuts the Science Mission Directorate by 47%. Congress rejected identical cuts in FY2026 and held science funding roughly flat . That precedent provides some floor, but the enacted level is unlikely to match the $9 billion the congressional letter demands.

Administrator Isaacman backed the budget that condemns the rocket he administers . The SLS 'grossly expensive' language signals The Administration may be building the institutional case for SLS retirement in favour of commercial alternatives; without naming them in the budget documents.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

The US government's spending plan for next year pays more for the Moon rocket programme while cutting nearly half the science budget that uses the data those rockets collect. It also calls the rocket itself 'grossly expensive' in the same document that funds it. Dozens of space science missions are targeted for termination.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    47% science budget cut eliminates workforce capacity to analyse Artemis II radiation and heat shield data at programme scale.

  • Consequence

    SLS 'grossly expensive' language in its own budget document may signal the administration is building the institutional case for SLS retirement.

First Reported In

Update #8 · Thirteen minutes on a shield NASA already replaced

SpacePolicyOnline (Marcia Smith)· 10 Apr 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
JAXA
JAXA
JAXA is an Artemis Accords signatory with the Lunar Cruiser rover planned for south-pole surface operations; Chang'e 7's first-arrival timeline compresses the window those surface systems were designed to operate in alongside American crew.
Space Research Institute RAS / Roscosmos
Space Research Institute RAS / Roscosmos
The LILEM instrument on Chang'e 7 gives Russia science-cooperation presence at Shackleton's rim with no independent crewed lunar capability on a public timeline. This is Roscosmos's only confirmed path to south-pole science in the current decade.
CNSA / China Manned Space Agency
CNSA / China Manned Space Agency
Chang'e 7 at Wenchang confirmed a second-half 2026 launch for Shackleton rim, 18 to 24 months before any American crewed arrival. The mission carries a Russian LILEM instrument, giving Roscosmos a south-pole science foothold inside China's programme.
Jeremy Hansen / Canadian Space Agency
Jeremy Hansen / Canadian Space Agency
Hansen appeared at the 16 April JSC press conference in his only public moment since splashdown. Canada's Canadarm3 remains without a confirmed deployment host after Gateway cancellation, with CSA maintaining institutional silence on the programme's status.
Airbus Defence and Space
Airbus Defence and Space
Airbus has issued no post-mission ESM performance statement; its press room returned a 404 error on a 14 April check. The only named Airbus engineer quote on the mission appeared in a Nature interview, not a company release.
Daniel Neuenschwander / European Space Agency
Daniel Neuenschwander / European Space Agency
ESA's 11 April statement praised ESM translunar injection precision and omitted the pressurisation valve anomaly; the June 2026 Council is the sole stated review forum. ESM-3 is at KSC without a corrected-baseline disclosure to justify its readiness.