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Moon landings remain hard; and a truly comprehensive testing regime non-optional for success.

2 min readJun 12, 2025

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Note the following about four recent Moon landing attempts.

As indispensable as comprehensive testing is, another hard fact is that private companies don’t have the kind of high budgets or time afforded by government space agencies. This necessarily implies lesser overall redundancy in their robotic lander designs as well as a testing regime that’s always battling cost and schedule — all leading to greater risks. Even fuel margins on privately built landers tend to be on the lower side because every kilogram of added fuel reserve would take away at least several hundred thousand dollars worth of commercial payload capacity. But alas, the closer a lander is to the surface during lunar descent, the lesser its ability to self-correct with depleting fuel reserves.

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– Published as part of Moon Monday #228: The need for resilience in private lunar landing missions through expansive and collaborative testing

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Jatan Mehta
Jatan Mehta

Written by Jatan Mehta

Independent Space Writer ~ Author of Moon Monday ~ Invited Speaker ~ Slow thinker ~ Human | Just read my blog: https://jatan.space 🌗

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