Congress advances bill to reconsider ISS deorbiting

The US House Science, Space, and Technology Committee has approved an amendment to the NASA Reauthorization Act of 2026, directing the agency to study options for preserving the International Space Station in orbit after its planned 2030 retirement. Instead of deorbiting the station into the Pacific Ocean in 2031, the proposal calls for evaluating a safe orbital harbor. The measure received bipartisan support during the committee's markup session.

The House Science, Space, and Technology Committee unanimously voted on February 6, 2026, to advance the NASA Reauthorization Act of 2026, incorporating over 40 amendments. One key addition, proposed by Rep. George Whitesides (D-Calif.) and cosponsored by Rep. Nick Begich (R-Alaska), requires NASA to conduct an engineering analysis on transferring the International Space Station (ISS) to a higher orbit for potential future reuse, rather than its current plan to guide it toward destructive reentry over the Pacific Ocean in 2031.

Whitesides, a former NASA chief of staff, emphasized the station's significance during the hearing. "The International Space Station is one of the most complex engineering achievements in human history," he said. "It represents more than three decades of international collaboration and investment by US taxpayers estimated at well over $100 billion." He clarified that the amendment does not alter the 2030 end-of-life timeline but seeks a thorough assessment of preservation options. Rep. Brian Babin (R-Texas) expressed wholehearted support, while Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) added, "I just hate the thought that we would take something not just that we spent all the money on, but such an important part of human history, and dump it in the Pacific Ocean, never to be seen again, rather than preserving it."

NASA's existing deorbit strategy involves a SpaceX vehicle, contracted for nearly $1 billion in 2024, to slow the 450-ton station by about 127 mph using 10 tons of propellant. Alternatives considered in a 2024 NASA analysis include boosting it to 400-420 miles altitude, requiring 18.9 to 22.3 metric tons of propellant for a 100-year orbit, or higher for millennia-long stability. However, these options demand new vehicles and raise debris collision risks, especially around 500 miles.

The ISS, operational since 1998, could potentially extend beyond 2030, with recent upgrades to solar arrays and sealed Russian module leaks supporting its integrity. NASA's shift to commercial low-Earth orbit destinations, funded at $273 million this year, faces challenges, including underfunding and rule changes. Companies like Vast, planning Haven-1 for 2027, back the 2030 transition. Vast CEO Max Haot stated, "We support President Trump’s directive in national space policy to replace the ISS by 2030, with commercial partners who can ensure there is no gap in America’s continuous human presence in space."

The bill now heads to the full House, Senate, and White House for further approval.

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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.

China plans to add three modules to its Tiangong space station, doubling its size, as Nasa prepares to retire the International Space Station in early 2031. State broadcaster CCTV reports that Tiangong will first receive a fourth multifunctional module attached to the Tianhe core, forming a cross-shaped configuration. The expansion will create a six-module structure with a total mass of about 180 tonnes, though no timeline has been released.

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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.

A Crew Dragon spacecraft docked with the International Space Station on Valentine’s Day, bringing four new astronauts and restoring NASA's full complement in orbit. The arrival followed an early return of a Crew-11 member due to a health emergency, leaving a single NASA astronaut to manage operations alone for over a month. The new crew members are Jessica Meir and Jack Hathaway from NASA, Sophie Adenot from the European Space Agency, and Andrey Fedyaev from Roscosmos.

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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.

NASA has completed initial evaluations of the Artemis II mission systems following the crew's safe return from a lunar flyby earlier this month. The Orion spacecraft and SLS rocket performed as expected, setting a new record for the farthest distance traveled from Earth. Minor issues arose with the toilet system, but the crew resolved them successfully.

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Orion spacecraft from Artemis 2 mission has completed its final maneuver before atmospheric reentry, the most critical phase of the journey. Astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen face a 13-minute descent at over 40,000 km/h and temperatures above 2,500 degrees, with splashdown planned off San Diego.

 

 

 

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