The Trump administration's plan for NASA is taking shape, and that shape is lunar. This might seem like a sideshow, or even a travesty for those laser-focused on Mars exploration and settlement. However, there are advantages to creating a base on the Moon, where techniques and materials for space operations can be tested and refined at a distance of days, instead of months. Just as on the Moon, operations on Mars will require space suits that protect workers without exhausting them, materials that can stand the cold and the radiaton, and techniques to cope with dust and the rigors of low-atmosphere, low-gravity conditions.
Both Moon and Mars are expensive. The cost of freight to LEO, about $50k+ per kilogram in the Space-Shuttle era, dropped to about $10k by the 1990s, has steadily declined since, and might dip well under $1,000 per kilogram if SpaceX achieves its aims. Getting freight to the Moon can cost many times that amount, but that cost will come down, too, especially once refueling in LEO becomes practical. Space opportunities increase as costs come down.
The Moon has water ice at the poles, a source of hydrogen and oxygen that would sustain a small base for a long time, given sufficient investment in nuclear and/or energy-producing equipment. Even so, you can make an excellent case for the idiocy of expanded continuous Moon operations, since the Moon offers little or nothing that can be shipped back for profit, harsh and limited living conditions for settlement, and only modest opportunities for scientific learning. As Robert Zubrin recently noted, the Moon is singularly resource-poor, whereas Mars has abundant amounts of useful ingredients. The Moon is a bad bet for going all in long term on human habitation. Mars is still the ultimate reachable prize for human expansion into space. However, if a Moon base doesn't suck up all the money, and NASA is smart enough to utilize each good Mars launch window as an opportunity to build infrastructure on and around Mars, then working on a Moon base now can be synergistic with plans to explore and settle Mars later.
Remember, in business it's all about the Benjamins.
Kevin Kelly, February 15, 2026