GM to help get astronauts to moon’s dangerous South Pole with new lunar roving vehicle

General Motors and Lockheed Martin will help astronauts reach the moon’s dangerous South Pole.

GM announced Wednesday it is partnering with the aerospace and defense company to develop the next generation of electric lunar roving vehicles that will travel greater distances than those did in the past. It provided no financial details of the partnership. 

Future Artemis astronauts gaze at concepts of of lunar mobility vehicles, or rovers, developed by Lockheed Martin and GM.

The vehicles will be used for NASA’s Artemis program. On its website, NASA describes Artemis as “an ongoing space mission … with the goal of landing the first female astronaut and next male astronaut on the moon’s South Pole by 2024.”

That landing will be the U.S. space agency’s first crewed moon mission since Apollo 17 in 1972. The mission to send humans, including a person of color, back to the moon is so that they can explore and conduct scientific experiments.

The rover vehicles are key to the next manned-moon mission because they will allow scientists to study such things as the ice on the moon, which will, in turn, help them understand the creation of Earth, said Kirk Shireman, vice president of lunar exploration campaigns at Lockheed Martin.

“To land the next woman and man on the moon you need to land on a flat surface, but science likes boulders,” Shireman said. “So we want to land astronauts safely. But the interesting places might be in the shadow of a crater, so how do you get there? That’s why we’re working with GM on developing these rovers.”

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The rovers will be unpressurized and made of lightweight, strong, long-lasting and “resilient materials … exactly what those are, is in formulation,” Shireman said. He said initially, the rovers will carry two astronauts with the idea of expanding their size to hold more people in the future. 

Shireman said the farthest astronauts have traveled from the landing site has only been a few miles, so expanding that range, “is really going to open up the moon for us, for scientists and for other commercial activities. Where this goes? It’s got huge potential.”

But Shireman stopped short of saying what the future rover vehicles’ range will be, noting that it is 6,800 miles to go around the entire moon. Past rovers have traveled just a few miles.