The Daily Broadcast: Josh Kutryk Launches on Crew-13; Canada’s Moon Base and Spaceport Milestones

The Daily Broadcast: Josh Kutryk Launches on Crew-13; Canada’s Moon Base and Spaceport Milestones

Josh Kutryk Prepares for Crew-13 Mission to the ISS

Canadian astronaut Joshua Kutryk is readying for launch aboard a SpaceX Crew Dragon no earlier than September 12, 2026, as part of NASA’s Crew-13 mission to the International Space Station. Kutryk spoke to a full house at the University of Calgary on May 25, 2026, detailing his upcoming six-month mission and Canada’s expanding role in space exploration.

Canadian Astronaut Josh Kutryk speaks at the University of Calgary on May 25, 2026 ahead of his 6 month mission to the International Space Station as part of Crew 13. | Source: SpaceQ

Kutryk, whose path to space began as a childhood dream on a farm east of Vegreville, Alberta, built his career as a military pilot and test pilot before entering the astronaut corps. During his ISS stint, his days will be timelined down to five-minute increments, balancing station operations with Canadian science experiments. He emphasised the terrestrial impact of space medicine research, noting that solutions to physiological challenges in deep space—such as remote healthcare and AI-assisted medicine—directly benefit isolated communities in Canada.

The astronaut framed the ISS as a stepping stone to sustained lunar exploration. Reflecting on the Artemis II mission flown by fellow Canadian Jeremy Hansen, Kutryk underscored the unifying power of international collaboration. Before departing, Kutryk revealed he will fly an Edmonton Oilers jersey to orbit—a nod to his Alberta roots.

MDA Space Partners on NASA’s Lunar Terrain Vehicle Program

On May 26, 2026, NASA outlined its iterative Moon Base strategy, emphasising a commercial-heavy approach to establishing sustained lunar presence. The agency awarded two $220 million contracts to develop crewed and autonomous rovers for Phase 1 operations running through 2029.

A full-scale prototype of Lunar Outpost’s lunar terrain vehicle named Pegasus. Credit: Lunar Outpost. | Source: SpaceQ

Lunar Outpost, prime contractor for the Lunar Dawn consortium, secured one of the LTV awards for its Pegasus rover. The consortium includes Canada’s MDA Space, which is supplying robotics and infrastructure expertise alongside partners Leidos, General Motors, and Goodyear. Astrolab received the second $220 million contract for its CLV-1 FlexRover architecture. Both vehicles can travel up to 200 kilometres at speeds of 10 kilometres per hour and will be delivered to the lunar surface using Blue Origin’s Mark 1 Endurance lander.

NASA’s Phase 1 planning targets an aggressive cadence of 25 launches and 21 landings between now and 2029, with cargo deliveries expanding from roughly 4 metric tons initially to 60 metric tons in Phase 2, and ultimately 150 metric tons by Phase 3. The agency is actively soliciting new concepts through two Broad Agency Announcements and expects additional CLPS 1.0 mission awards in June. Hardware stacking for the next crewed Artemis III mission is scheduled to begin this summer, targeting a mid-2027 launch.

Maritime Launch Services Secures Landmark DND Spaceport Deal

Maritime Launch Services reported Q1 2026 results marked by a transformative $200 million, 10-year lease agreement with the Canadian Department of National Defence. The lease, running retroactively from April 1, 2025, to March 31, 2035, provides $20 million annually for use of the 334.5-acre spaceport in Guysborough County, Nova Scotia.

The company reported Q1 revenue of $946,603, dominated by $921,649 recognised from the DND lease beginning March 16, 2026. The $20 million upfront payment doubled total assets to $48.27 million and raised cash on hand to $30.48 million. On April 10, MLS leveraged this liquidity to completely repay its $5.03 million Export Development Canada facility, though the credit line remains available. The lease includes a domestic spending clause requiring at least 90% of proceeds to be used in Canada or with Canadian-domiciled businesses.

On May 26, timed with the CANSEC defence conference, MLS announced a Letter of Intent with German launch provider Isar Aerospace to advance sovereign orbital launch capability from Nova Scotia. Isar’s Spectrum vehicle can deploy commercial and defence payloads up to 1,000 kilograms into mid- to high-inclination and polar orbits. The partnership underscores MLS’s role in building Canada’s reliable access to space, supported by the April introduction of Bill C-28, the Canadian Space Launch Act, which establishes the country’s first dedicated federal framework for commercial space operations.

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