Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of February 1-7, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.
During the Week
Today (Sunday) is the 23rd anniversary of the Space Shuttle Columbia tragedy that took the lives of NASA’s Rick Husband, William McCool, Michael Anderson, Kalpana Chawla, David Brown, and Laurel Clark and Israeli Air Force Pilot Ilan Ramon. As we noted last week, NASA’s Day of Remembrance was early this year because of where the fourth Thursday in January fell, but many of us will be remembering the brave Columbia crew today along with all those who lost their lives in the pursuit of spaceflight.
The crew of Space Shuttle Columbia (STS-107) perished 23 years ago today. Returning from a 16-day science mission, their space shuttle disintegrated during reentry when superheated gases entered the shuttle’s wing through a hole punctured in it by a piece of foam that came off the External Tank during launch. The wing deformed and aerodynamic forces tore the shuttle apart. L-R: David Brown (NASA), Rick Husband (NASA), Laurel Clark (NASA), Kalpana Chawla (NASA), Michael Anderson (NASA), William McCool (NASA), Ilan Ramon (Israeli Air Force). Photo credit: NASA.
Space shuttle flights resumed two-and-a-half years later and NASA continues sending crews to the International Space Station in earth orbit. Next up is Crew-12, who could launch as soon as February 11, but their launch date is somewhat dependent on when Artemis II lifts off. We’ll have more on Crew-12 next week.
Artemis II could launch before them and take astronauts not just to earth orbit, but around the Moon for the first time since the Apollo era. The four-person Artemis II crew is in quarantine right now ready to go, but first the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket must pass the Wet Dress Rehearsal (WDR) test. NASA will fill SLS with liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen propellant — called “tanking” — while conducting a series of countdown tests with various holds until they get to the point where they will count down to about 30 seconds before liftoff would occur. They’ll stop there and drain the tanks.
The crew of Artemis II on the Crew Access Arm leading to the Orion capsule for a pre-flight test. They are in quarantine right now awaiting launch as early as February 8. They will be the first astronauts to fly around the Moon since the Apollo era. L-R: Victor Glover, pilot (NASA), Jeremy Hansen, Canadian Space Agency (Mission Specialist), Christina Koch, Mission Specialist (NASA), Reid Wiseman, Commander (NASA). Photo credit: NASA
The WDR was delayed two days by frigid weather in Florida and although it’s still unusually cold they began the roughly 49-hour test last night. A 24/7 livestream is available. The simulated launch window opens at 9:00 pm tomorrow, February 2, and continues through about 1:00 am on February 3. NASA posted the timeline. A go/no-go decision on whether to proceed with tanking will be made at the L-10 hour 20 minute mark.
The Artemis II Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and Orion spacecraft on the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center January 17, 2026. Photo credit: NASA/Joel Kowsky.
If the WDR goes well, Artemis II could launch as soon as February 8. The previous target of February 6 no longer is possible. This is a test flight and they will fly around the Moon on a free-return trajectory so they will come back to Earth even if the Orion propulsion system doesn’t perform as planned. They will not orbit the Moon, much less land. (The first landing since Apollo is currently targeted for 2028.)
This is the second SLS launch. The first was Artemis I, an uncrewed test flight of SLS and the Orion crew capsule in November-December 2022. A number of issues arose during several WDRs for Artemis I and, together with hurricane-related delays, it was eight months between when it first rolled to the launch pad and actually lifted off. This WDR is designed to wring out any problems with the rocket, spacecraft, or ground systems and while NASA is applying lessons learned from Artemis I, it would not be surprising if some were discovered. The Earth and Moon must be properly aligned for such missions. A number of days every month are possibilities. If they can’t launch one month, then can launch another. Here’s NASA’s list of opportunities for the next three months.

Up on Capitol Hill this week, Congress will try to finish more of the FY2026 appropriations bills. They completed action on NASA’s FY2026 funding two weeks ago and five others are done, but the remaining six aren’t to the finish line yet. Those include Defense and Transportation-HUD. The U.S Space Force is funded in the Defense bill and FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation is in THUD.
The House passed all six, but as three separate bills. The Homeland Security bill, which funds ICE, is very controversial and the House dealt with that one by itself. It passed by a narrow margin. The House then combined it with the others and sent it to the Senate expecting the package would get enough votes in order to avoid another government shutdown. But the incident in Minneapolis last weekend changed the dynamics and the Senate could pass only five of the six, not Homeland Security. With White House support, they substituted a two-week CR for Homeland to provide time to find a resolution. Since the Senate changed what the House passed, it now must be voted on again by the House.
That’s expected to happen early this week, but the timing is uncertain. Until then, departments and agencies in those bills, including Defense, are once again in a shutdown. The shutdown affects activities funded through the appropriations process, but not by other sources like the reconciliation bill — the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) — that passed last summer. DOD got about $156 billion in the OBBBA, including $13.8 billion for the Space Force.
Also on Capitol Hill this week, the House Science, Space, and Technology Committee will hold a full committee markup of a new NASA Authorization bill on Wednesday. The committee announced the markup on Friday and provided the bill number, H.R. 7273, but the text is not publicly available yet. The most recent NASA authorization was enacted in 2022 as part of the CHIPS and Science Act. House SS&T and the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee oversee NASA. Committee leaders on both sides of the aisle and both sides of the Hill have expressed intent to pass a new one for quite some time and the House passed one in 2024, but the Senate did not act on it. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Senator Maria Cantwell (D-WA), Chairman and Ranking Member of Senate Commerce, introduced a bipartisan NASA authorization bill last year, but there’s been no action on it yet. Authorization bills set policy and may recommend funding levels, but not do provide any money.
Senate Commerce will take up two other bipartisan space-related bills this week. The ORBITS Act (Hickenlooper, D-CO) seeks to ensure space sustainability by remediating space debris, and the SAT Streamlining Act (Cruz, R-TX) seeks to make it easier for commercial satellite companies to get approval from the FCC.
Those and other events we know about as of Sunday morning are shown below. Check back throughout the week for others we learn about later and add to our Calendar or changes to these.
Monday-Tuesday, February 2-3
Monday-Friday, February 2-6 (continues next week)
Tuesday, February 3
Wednesday, February 4
Last Updated: Feb 01, 2026 3:38 pm ET
