Keith’s note: NASA OIG just issued an interim memo NASA’s Management of Programs and Projects after Mission Termination—Canceled or Repurposed Artemis Campaign Systems. No formal findings / recommendations since the Ignition and other efforts to rescope the Artemis Program have changed everything around. A few highlights:
- In June 2019, NASA contracted with Bechtel National, Inc. to design, build, and test the ML-2. Originally valued at $383 million, the cost-plus-award-fee contract required delivery of the launcher to NASA by March 2023…. In February 2026, NASA issued a stop work order to Bechtel to suspend all work on the ML-2. By this time, the ML-2 contract value had grown by 314 percent to almost $1.6 billion, and its delivery schedule had been delayed by over 3 years to May 2026.
- In July 2019, NASA sole-sourced the acquisition of Gateway’s HALO to Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems, later awarding the company $187 million to complete the preliminary design of the module. … in April 2026, the Agency issued a stop work order to Northrop Grumman for its work on the HALO contract. By then, the value of the contract had risen to $1.9 billion and Northrop Grumman was working to address corrosion throughout HALO’s primary structure, which would significantly impact the project’s schedule.
- In 2015, Congress directed NASA to design a more powerful upper stage for use in upgraded variants of its SLS heavy-lift rocket. NASA selected The Boeing Company to design and manufacture the EUS … In March 2026, NASA issued a stop work order to Boeing suspending further work on the EUS. By this time, the EUS portion of the contract value had more than doubled to almost $2 billion while the delivery date for the upper stage was unspecified.
- Update from @NASAAdmin: “We are doing things differently now. NASA cannot take years longer than expected and spend billions more than planned when the world is waiting for the headlines only NASA can deliver. The programs covered in the report will free up more than $3 billion in the years ahead for more missions of science and discovery. The small pilot program we implemented to rebuild core competencies has already resulted in nearly $200 million a year in savings. That means more Moon Base missions, more astronauts in space, more telescopes, more nuclear spaceships and more x-planes.”