NASA’S official plans to build a permanent base on the Moon have seemingly leaked online, revealing how and when astronauts will return to the rocky world for the first time in 50 years.

Internal documents appear to show how Nasa wants to launch 37 rockets to the Moon within the next decade, with at least five of these carrying astronauts.

 Key points in Nasa's Moon base plans
Key points in Nasa’s Moon base plans

Starting with an unmanned rover in 2023, the space agency is expected to land people on the Moon in 2024.

Nasa will then fire manned missions to Earth’s neighbour every year between 2024 and 2028, according to the documents, which were obtained by Arstechnica.

The decade-long program culminates with a permanent lunar base, which Nasa wants to start building in 2028.

The plans began circulating among Nasa staff last week, according to Arstechnica’s Eric Berger.

 These official Nasa Moon plans were supposedly circulated to staff last week

Nasa

These official Nasa Moon plans were supposedly circulated to staff last week
 Nasa wants to stick a robotic rover on the Moon in 2023. It could look something like the £2billion Curiosity Mars rover (artist's impression)

Nasa

Nasa wants to stick a robotic rover on the Moon in 2023. It could look something like the £2billion Curiosity Mars rover (artist’s impression)

They are in part a response to recent calls from US Vice President Mike Pence to take astronauts back to the Moon.

“In the nearly two months since Pence directed Nasa to return to the Moon by 2024, space agency engineers have been working to put together a plan that leverages existing technology, large projects nearing completion, and commercial rockets to bring this about,” Berger wrote.

“Last week, an updated plan that demonstrated a human landing in 2024, annual sorties to the lunar surface thereafter, and the beginning of a Moon base by 2028, began circulating within the agency.”

Berger did not say how he obtained the plans, which have not yet been made public.

They do appear to line up with previous statements from Nasa about its lunar program, codenamed Artemis.

As with any space exploration project, the main obstacle is cash.

Nasa reckons it will need £4.5billion to £6.5billion per year on top of Nasa’s existing budget of about £16billion.

Boss Jim Bridenstine recently asked for an extra £1.3billion in fiscal year 2020 to start developing a lunar lander.

Amazon’s Jeff Bezos unveils Blue Origin’s lunar lander called Blue Moon
 An orbiting lunar base called Gateway forms part of Nasa's plans. Astronauts will begin building it by 2028 (artist's impression)

Nasa

An orbiting lunar base called Gateway forms part of Nasa’s plans. Astronauts will begin building it by 2028 (artist’s impression)

The plan also relies heavily on contractors delivering ambitious hardware on time, which has hindered Nasa in the past.

Boeing has been developing the core stage of the agency’s next-gen rocket, the Space Launch System, for eight years – but has yet to come up with the goods.

Boeing’s handling of the multi-billion-pound contract, which is now twice over budget, has been blasted by Nasa’s Inspector General.

Nasa was not immediately available for comment.

 Nasa's next-gen rocket, the long-delayed Space launch System (artist's impression), forms a key part of the plans. It's yet to undergo any sort of test flight

Nasa

Nasa’s next-gen rocket, the long-delayed Space launch System (artist’s impression), forms a key part of the plans. It’s yet to undergo any sort of test flight
 The plan is to have a permanent human presence on the Moon by the 2030s (artist's impression)

Nasa

The plan is to have a permanent human presence on the Moon by the 2030s (artist’s impression)

In other space news, Nasa released a video last week teasing its Moon mission goals.

Amazon boss Jeff Bezos recently pledged to land a man on the moon by 2024 with a rocket built by his private space firm Blue Origin.

He also showed off sci-fi renders of his plans for giant rotating space habitats that could house a trillion people.

What do you think of Nasa’s plans? Let us know in the comments!


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