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NASA has revealed new details about its ambitious plan to build a permanent base on the Moon, including robotic landers, hopping drones and advanced lunar vehicles. Companies such as Blue Origin, Astrobotic and Intuitive Machines will help develop the technology needed for future missions. The agency hopes to send astronauts back to the Moon before 2028 and establish semi-permanent housing near the lunar south pole by 2032. Scientists believe the region could provide frozen water for oxygen and fuel production. However, experts say major technical challenges remain, especially with spacecraft capable of safely landing humans on the Moon.

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Transcript
00:00In the three phases we've described, we hope to have some sort of habitation capability in phase two with the
00:08pressurized rover.
00:09That will be where the astronauts can land on their human-rated lander, hop on the pressurized rover and basically
00:16work and explore the moon on a short-lived environment.
00:19And then from there, go to different locations where they can get out of the pressurized rover, perhaps hop onto
00:25a lunar terrain vehicle, and even go farther with EVA suits.
00:29In phase two, we'll be building permanent infrastructure, including laying out a power grid and things like that, all building
00:37up to what it takes to do permanent habitation.
00:40And then eventually when we've matched the assets, habitation modules, with the logistics and all the things to move the
00:47logistics around, then we'll be able to say, hey, we're permanently here and we're not giving it up.
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