The project has to be government funded or government owned. The mission needs to have its official name and proposed date of launch with proposed space craft to launch.
Will something like this qualify? The Zambian president announced a space program in 1964
Let's imagine a country like North Korea announces a Mars mission.
@GazDownright Statement of the government about the vision does not count. It only counts when there is a planned proposal, deciding at least name of the Project, proposed date and launching mechanism/spacecraft
@Mqrius The last announced mission is Artemis III. They haven't announced official plans for manned mission to Mars.
@AnjanPoudel5d85 So I agree that they haven't announced any missions to Mars yet.
But for Artemis there's a lot more missions announced than just Artemis 3. That's why I'm wondering, to what detail does the mission needs to be announced? We've got missions announced up to Artemis 8 for the moon, mostly including launch dates. What makes you say they don't count as "announced missions"?
I'm asking because I think this market is gonna be very hard to resolve if we don't get this clear ahead of time!
@Mqrius Updated the description. The mission needs to have its official name and proposed date of launch.
@AnjanPoudel5d85 Fair enough. Does the date need to be specific? So in the above list, only Artemis 1 would count? Or is a vague date like Artemis 7 okay, like "September 2031"?
@AnjanPoudel5d85 But i imagine a NASA-branded mission using SpaceX hardware would count, right? Similar to the situation with Artemis.
@CommanderZander but isn't the US government funding most space exploration at this moment. Even for SpaceX and Boeing?