U.S. space agency NASA on Thursday said it will not send its rover to the moon after all, citing high costs and launch delays as reasons for the cancellation.
The project, dubbed Volatiles Investigating Polar Exploration Rover or VIPER, will be discontinued following a “comprehensive internal review,” NASA said at a news conference.
The space agency said the decision to reconsider the project came amid escalating costs, potential future cost increases and a launch date delay.
According to NASA, the rover was originally scheduled to launch in late 2023, but the launch had to be postponed to later this year.
After another delay, NASA had last anticipated that the launch would take place in September 2025.
The VIPER robot was poised to roam the moon’s South Pole, gathering soil samples with a drill.
The launch was planned to be carried out with assistance from the private space company Astrobotic.
NASA said that the rover would now be dismantled and the parts used elsewhere.
“Our path forward will make maximum use of the technology and work that went into VIPER while preserving critical funds to support our robust lunar portfolio,” the agency’s manager Nicola Fox said.
dpa/NAN