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Artemis II Crew Faces Persistent Technical Issues with Orion Waste System Near Moon

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Artemis II Crew Faces Persistent Technical Issues with Orion Waste System Near Moon

The Artemis II crew, currently halfway through their historic mission, continues to grapple with a persistent malfunction of the Orion spacecraft’s waste management system. NASA confirmed Tuesday that the "lunar loo" has been failing intermittently since launch.

Mission control has instructed the four-person crew to utilize backup urine collection bags while engineers investigate the blockage. Diagnostic data suggests ice may have formed within the lines, preventing liquid waste from being flushed overboard.

The crew includes NASA’s Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, and Christina Koch, alongside Canada’s Jeremy Hansen. Despite plumbing challenges, Pilot Victor Glover reported morale remains high after the spacecraft completed its historic lunar fly-around on Monday.

"The Earth is quite small, and the moon is definitely getting bigger," Glover stated. The crew is setting a new distance record for human spaceflight, traveling more than 400,000 kilometers from Earth and surpassing the Apollo 13 mark.

Debbie Korth, Orion program deputy manager, acknowledged that the astronauts reported an odor from the bathroom area. The facility is located beneath the capsule floor, separated from the cabin by a door and privacy curtain.

"Space toilets and bathrooms are something everybody can really understand ... it's always a challenge," Korth noted. She added that similar technical difficulties were common during the Space Shuttle era and remain a hurdle for deep-space hardware.

John Honeycutt, mission management chair, emphasized that the astronauts were trained to handle such contingencies. He stated that while the system is not at 100 percent capacity, the mission remains on schedule for an April 10 splashdown.

President Donald Trump’s administration has prioritized the Artemis program as a pillar of American space leadership. This mission serves as a critical test before NASA attempts a crewed lunar landing in 2028.

Jeremy Hansen’s participation marks a milestone as the first non-U.S. citizen to travel to the moon. Canadian Space Agency President Lisa Campbell stated that Hansen’s journey reflects the bravery required to reach for more.