NASA seeks information on commercial cargo service to Moon

IANS  |  Washington 

In a possible push to advance space mining, is seeking information on commercial payload delivery services to the lunar surface, media reported.

This week, issued a Request for Information (RfI) to the private industry for proposals related to cargo transportation to the lunar surface, as well as a potential mission to collect lunar samples and deliver them back to Earth, Inverse.com reported on Wednesday.

The exact purpose of such a request for information (RFI), like most of the agency's RFIs, remains ambiguous, the report said.

"has identified a variety of exploration, science, and technology demonstration objectives that could be addressed by sending instruments, experiments, or other payloads to the lunar surface," the RFI reads.

"To address these objectives as cost-effectively as possible, may procure payloads and related commercial payload delivery services to the Moon," it said.

said it is interested in assessing the availability of payload transit and delivery services from Earth to the lunar surface as early as fiscal year 2018 and through the next decade.

The RFI was issued to determine whether or not there are interested and available domestic vendor sources capable of meeting the identified requirements.

--IANS

gb/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

NASA seeks information on commercial cargo service to Moon

In a possible push to advance space mining, NASA is seeking information on commercial payload delivery services to the lunar surface, media reported.

In a possible push to advance space mining, is seeking information on commercial payload delivery services to the lunar surface, media reported.

This week, issued a Request for Information (RfI) to the private industry for proposals related to cargo transportation to the lunar surface, as well as a potential mission to collect lunar samples and deliver them back to Earth, Inverse.com reported on Wednesday.

The exact purpose of such a request for information (RFI), like most of the agency's RFIs, remains ambiguous, the report said.

"has identified a variety of exploration, science, and technology demonstration objectives that could be addressed by sending instruments, experiments, or other payloads to the lunar surface," the RFI reads.

"To address these objectives as cost-effectively as possible, may procure payloads and related commercial payload delivery services to the Moon," it said.

said it is interested in assessing the availability of payload transit and delivery services from Earth to the lunar surface as early as fiscal year 2018 and through the next decade.

The RFI was issued to determine whether or not there are interested and available domestic vendor sources capable of meeting the identified requirements.

--IANS

gb/vm

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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