NASA selects Blue Origin to take the once-canceled VIPER rover to the moon
An expensive lunar rover that once had its moon trip canceled has a ride once again.
NASA has selected Blue Origin to help get VIPER, the Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover, to the moon by awarding Jeff Bezos’ company a task order under its Commercial Lunar Payload Services program.
VIPER was once supposed to be the primary payload of Astrobotic’s yet-to-fly Griffin lander with a 2023 launch date for under $200 million. But NASA canceled that mission in 2024 after the costs for both the rover construction and adjustments to the Astrobotic contract ballooned to nearly $800 million and the launch date continued to slip.
But now VIPER is back with a ride on Blue Origin’s Blue Moon Mark 1 robotic lander, which also has yet to fly. NASA’s task order is worth up to $190 million for what would be Blue Origin’s second CLPS contract. The first, also using the MK1 lander is still on the clock to launch to the moon’s south pole with a pair of NASA assets along for the ride later in 2025 on a New Glenn rocket from Cape Canaveral, according to NASA.