04/01/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/01/2026 19:13
What you need to know: With contributions from more than 500 companies and 16,000 workers, California is the largest state-level contributor to NASA's Artemis II. As the space agency sends astronauts on a historic lunar mission, California's nation-leading innovation ecosystem and workforce are helping ensure mission success.
SACRAMENTO - Today Governor Gavin Newsom highlighted the California companies and workers who contributed to NASA's Artemis II, the United State's first crewed lunar mission in more than 50 years. With contributions from more than 500 companies and 16,000 workers, California represents the largest state-level contributor to the Artemis missions. California is home to one-third of the nation's space technology companies and employs more aerospace engineers and defense personnel than any other state.
From the Apollo generation to now the Artemis generation, our state continues to lead the nation in reaching new frontiers. California's unparalleled innovation ecosystem, skilled workforce and leading companies are helping power Artemis II and ushering in the next era of space exploration. Tonight, the Golden State shines in the night sky.
Governor Gavin Newsom
Artemis II is NASA's first crewed mission of the Artemis program, sending astronauts on a lunar flyby to test deep-space systems before future moon landings. The mission's crew is expected to travel around the moon without landing and return to Earth over the course of ten days.
Industry leaders from across California have helped make this mission a reality, providing advanced manufacturing, software development, safety and security services and specialized components such as valves, harnesses, clamps, batteries and cables. Select companies involved in this historic mission include:
California is home to three NASA centers that contribute to the Artemis program: the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Armstrong Flight Research Center at Edwards Air Force Base and Ames Research Center in Mountain View. Ames teams used advanced computer models to prepare for the 32-story rocket's smooth ascent and simulated the return of NASA's Orion spacecraft to Earth. Their researchers will also help guide the mission's lunar observations.
The Artemis II crew of four highly skilled astronauts includes California native, Victor Glover, who was born in Pomona and earned his undergraduate degree at California Polytechnic State University in San Luis Obispo along with a master's degree from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey. As the first Black astronaut to pilot and reach the moon, Glover embodies California's diversity and leadership in space exploration. Glover will be joined by Commander Reid Wiseman, a Navy test pilot with International Space Station experience; Christina Koch, who participated in the first all-female spacewalk; and former fighter pilot Jeremy Hansen of the Canadian Space Agency.
When the mission concludes, the Orion spacecraft will splash down in the Pacific Ocean off the coast of San Diego, where a joint NASA and U.S. Navy team deploying from Naval Base San Diego will recover the crew and capsule. The waters off California have welcomed American lunar missions since the Apollo program, including every crewed flight from Apollo 8 through Apollo 17. With Artemis II, California once again anchors the mission from launch to landing, powered by its world-class companies and workforce, and culminating along its renowned coastline.
California's role in powering human spaceflight stretches back decades. The Saturn V rocket that carried Apollo astronauts to the moon was built almost entirely in California and the original Apollo spacecraft itself was manufactured across the state. The Space Shuttle fleet was assembled in Palmdale, the first U.S. space station, Skylab, was built in Huntington Beach, and the RS-25 engine - originally developed for the Shuttle and now powering the Space Launch System for Artemis II - has been designed and manufactured in the San Fernando Valley since the 1970s.
As of 2023, California is the top state in the country for:
Under Governor Newsom's California Jobs First Blueprint, Aerospace & Defense is an "accelerate" sector and is underpinned by a highly skilled and experienced workforce, world-class infrastructure and strong public-private investment, contributing an estimated $35 billion annually to California's gross domestic product (GDP).