NASA announced on Wednesday that it has commissioned two companies, Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace, to develop the spacesuits that will be worn by future astronauts on the Moon.

The outfits will also have to be used for the International Space Station (ISS).

Those currently worn have been used for about forty years.

"History will be made in these combinations," said Vanessa Wyche, director of NASA's Johnson Space Center, at a press conference.

“The first person of color and the first woman” to set foot on the Moon “will wear these suits,” she pointed out.

Development of public-private partnerships

NASA had originally planned to develop this new generation of suits itself, but it had fallen far behind schedule.

The choice to finally entrust them to two companies confirms the emphasis placed by the American agency in recent years on public-private partnerships.

"This allows us to save some costs, because we share the investments", argued Vanessa Wyche.

The two companies are investing "a significant amount of their own money," NASA said in a statement.

The details of the amount of the respective contracts have not yet been revealed, but in total the program has a ceiling of 3.5 billion dollars (3.25 billion euros), for a service rendered until 2034. The agency reserves the right to

ultimately

choose only one of the two companies, or both, or even to add others.

But they will remain owners of the suits and in charge of their maintenance.

Different specificities between the Moon and the ISS

NASA has detailed a whole series of needs and requirements, both for operating on the Moon and for outings in low orbit around the ISS.

The two environments do not present the same challenges, for example the weight of the suit is not an issue in weightlessness, while dust must be taken into account on the Moon.

Axiom Space and Collins Aerospace will therefore have to decide whether to make a single suit or make two separate ones.

Note that Axiom Space, which has already sent space tourists to the ISS with SpaceX, plans to build its own space station.

The company will thus itself need space suits for its future customers.

"We had planned to make a suit as part of our program, so it's fantastic to benefit from NASA's years of experience," said Michael Suffredini, CEO of Axiom Space.

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