Administrator NASA menguraikan perubahan organisasi besar demi efisiensi

Administrator NASA Jared Isaacman telah mengumumkan reformasi struktural yang bertujuan untuk mengurangi birokrasi dan memusatkan sumber daya pada misi-misi utama seperti kembali ke Bulan. Perubahan tersebut, yang dirinci dalam surel kepada para karyawan yang dikirim pada Jumat pagi, menggabungkan beberapa direktorat dan memberdayakan pusat-pusat lapangan dengan pendanaan yang stabil. Tidak ada pekerjaan atau pusat yang akan ditutup sebagai bagian dari upaya ini.

Isaacman menekankan perlunya memprioritaskan tujuan-tujuan yang berdampak tinggi dalam suratnya. Hal ini mencakup pelaksanaan Program Artemis, membangun pangkalan Bulan, mengembangkan tenaga nuklir untuk luar angkasa, mendorong ekonomi orbit rendah Bumi, dan memajukan pesawat X-plane bersama dengan misi sains. Sang administrator menyatakan bahwa sangat penting untuk memusatkan sumber daya pada tujuan-tujuan prioritas tertinggi dan membebaskan staf dari hambatan yang tidak perlu.

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Conceptual illustration of NASA's $20B Ignition moon base on lunar surface, highlighting shift from canceled Lunar Gateway amid Artemis program.
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NASA cancels Lunar Gateway to prioritize $20B moon base under Ignition plan

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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced the Ignition initiative on March 24, canceling the Lunar Gateway orbiting station to focus on a $20 billion three-phase moon base on the lunar surface. The shift, echoing Trump administration budget proposals, supports frequent Artemis crewed landings amid competition from China and preparations for the first crewed Artemis mission with a launch window opening April 1.

President Donald Trump unveiled a budget blueprint calling for a 23 percent reduction in NASA's funding for fiscal year 2027, shortly after the agency launched its first crewed lunar mission in over 50 years. The proposal requests $18.8 billion, down $5.6 billion from the prior year, prioritizing Moon landings and a lunar base. Congress rejected a similar cut last year.

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NASA has announced major changes to its Artemis program, shifting away from a lunar landing for the next mission in favor of incremental testing steps. The adjustments aim to increase launch frequency and reduce risks following recent setbacks. Officials hope this will lead to moon landings by 2028.

The US space agency NASA is set to launch its Artemis II mission today, sending astronauts to orbit the moon for the first time in over 50 years. Four astronauts from the US and Canada will undertake a test flight lasting about ten days. Germany provides the key European Service Module for the Orion spacecraft via the European Space Agency.

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Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil Works Adam Telle has launched a 27-part efficiency initiative for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ civil works program, aiming to cut red tape, speed project delivery and sharpen how the agency communicates about what the president’s budget does—and does not—fund.

NASA's Artemis II mission lifted off successfully on April 1, 2026, from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, sending astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen aboard the Orion spacecraft for the first crewed Moon flyby since Apollo 17. Powered by the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the 10-day test flight will validate critical systems for future lunar landings and Mars missions, looping around the Moon's far side.

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NASA's Artemis II astronauts have surpassed the halfway point to the Moon following Wednesday's translunar injection burn, continuing smooth progress on the historic 10-day mission—the first crewed trip beyond low Earth orbit since Apollo 17. The crew is on track for a lunar far-side flyby tomorrow and observations on April 6.

 

 

 

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