NASA's Carlos Garcia-Galan, program executive for the new Moon base under the Ignition initiative, was dubbed 'Lunar Viceroy' by Administrator Jared Isaacman at the Washington, DC, event announcing the plan. Transitioning from the canceled Lunar Gateway, Garcia-Galan highlighted supply chain challenges, international support, and steps to ensure two landings per year.
Building on Administrator Jared Isaacman's Ignition announcement—which canceled the Lunar Gateway to prioritize a lunar surface outpost—long-time NASA engineer Carlos Garcia-Galan, now program executive, shared operational details at Tuesday's event in Washington, DC. Isaacman playfully introduced him amid a table of microphones as the 'Lunar Viceroy,' underscoring agency backing for the shift. Garcia-Galan described the transition as straightforward, aligning with goals for human landings and an enduring outpost: 'Change is always hard... but it was not hard from the perspective of having the focus on doing something that’s directly related to the objectives we have at hand.' Key priorities include consolidating NASA's lunar programs, identifying 'choke points' in supply chains and manufacturing to support two Moon landings annually, and partnering on launches, landers, rovers, and payloads. International partners from Europe, Canada, Japan, and elsewhere have reacted positively—'everybody’s excited about it'—with no complaints despite prior Gateway investments. He praised Isaacman's direction as a 'total game-changer,' calling it the 'Jared factor' for focusing efforts. On funding, phases are projected at about $10 billion each, building on existing budgets for communications and CLPS, with needed adjustments. Addressing comparisons to failed programs like Constellation, Garcia-Galan stressed execution: 'We have to make it different... I’m focusing on how do we remove the blockers and chokeholds,' backed by full agency resources.