KEY POINTS
  • The International Space Station is expected to be retired by the end of this decade. NASA is turning to companies to build private space stations in orbit and anticipates saving more than $1 billion per year as a result.
  • NASA's director of commercial spaceflight, Phil McAlister, told CNBC that the agency "received roughly about a dozen proposals" from a variety of companies for contracts.
  • "We are making tangible progress on developing commercial space destinations where people can work, play and live," McAlister said.
An artist's illustration of the Axiom modules attached to the International Space Station.

NASA plans to retire the International Space Station by the end of this decade, so the U.S. space agency is turning to private companies to build new space stations in orbit – and expects to save more than $1 billion annually as a result.

NASA earlier this year unveiled the Commercial LEO Destinations project, with plans to award up to $400 million in total contracts to as many as four companies to begin development of private space stations.