Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!

Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!

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ALPHA TECH
26 Video Views·Dec 28, 2025  #alphatech #techalpha #spacex

Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!
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Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!
SpaceX has never officially promised it will land Starship on the Moon by 2026. But this mission is almost forced to happen that year – because it’s the last golden window for SpaceX to prove the reliability of Starship HLS, along with the complex Orbital refilling system, paving the way for a historic milestone: bringing Americans back to the lunar surface over five decades after Apollo.
So, can SpaceX pull off this bold goal on time? Or will the new space executive order, just signed by President Trump, throw a wrench into the 2026 uncrewed plan?
Let’s break it down in today’s episode of Alpha Tech.
Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!
In just a few days, we’ll wrap up a rollercoaster year of 2025, marked by five Starship flights from SpaceX – flights that gave us all the thrills, the nerves, and the excitement we live for. But those feelings are set to hit even harder in 2026, as this private company gears up for even bolder plans: catching both Starship and Super Heavy with Mechazilla, carrying out orbital refilling missions with Starship, and most exciting of all, landing an uncrewed HLS mission on the Moon to test and earn NASA’s crew certification.
All of these daring goals serve one ultimate purpose: supporting the Artemis 3 mission – a mission that promises to capture the world’s imagination and make a global impact.
Why SpaceX is facing Big Problem in Landing on the Moon in 2026...NASA Confirmed!
It’s not just about sending astronauts to the lunar surface, planting a flag, and scooping up a few buckets of regolith to bring back to Earth. This mission will lay the groundwork for an even bigger vision, one that NASA administrator Jared Isaacman publicly shared on television (0:36 - 0:45):
"Let's build a moon base. And then from there, we're going to start making investments in nuclear power in space, nuclear propulsion, so we can make that next giant leap."
To achieve these near-impossible goals, SpaceX now has less than two years to get everything ready before Artemis 3 – originally scheduled for 2027. So, is that timeline completely insane, especially when SpaceX hasn’t even rolled out a full HLS vehicle yet?
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