Toyota and JAXA plan to send space rover to the moon in 2029

This illustration shows a rover Toyota plans to jointly develop with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency. They are aiming to send it to the moon in 2029. | TOYOTA MOTOR CO. VIA KYODO

TOKYO, Mar 13, 2019, Kyodo. Toyota Motor Corp. said Tuesday it will jointly develop a rover to be sent to the moon in 2029, amid fierce global competition to explore Earth’s natural satellite, reported The Japan Times.

Toyota unveiled the project with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency to build a rover that can be powered by fuel cells and enable astronauts to live inside it for a certain period without wearing space suits, in what would be the first such development in the world.

JAXA is planning to send manned missions to the moon between 2029 and 2034.

“It is the greatest joy for engineers to be involved in projects on the surface of the moon. I’m really excited,” Shigeki Terashi, an executive vice president of Toyota, told a symposium held by JAXA in Tokyo.

The rover is planned to be 6 meters long, 5.2 meters wide and 3.8 meters high, with a living space of 13 square meters for up to four people, according to their study.

The tie-up comes at a time of growing international competition in lunar exploration.

The United States is planning to build an outpost high above the moon, while China announced in January it had become the first country to successfully land an unmanned probe on the dark side of the satellite. Last month, Israel launched its first lunar lander in a mission that was privately funded.

JAXA, which succeeded in February in having the Hayabusa2 probe touch down on a distant asteroid, is now focusing on using the technology to achieve a controlled touchdown on the Moon’s surface.

It is also planning to land an unmanned probe in the 2020s among other projects, before sending the rover to the Moon on an American rocket in 2029.

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