NASA unveils contemporary plans to stop asteroids before they hit the Earth. NASA has revised its plans to avoid asteroids from potentially dangerous land. The Office of Science and Technology Policy of the White House has released a new report called "National Strategy and Action Plan for the Preparation of Land Objects". The 18-page document outlines the measures that NASA and the Federal Emergency Management Agency will acquire over the next ten years. Prohibit dangerous asteroids from hitting the Earth and bringing the country together for possible outcomes of such an event.

Representatives from NASA, FEMA and the White House debated the new asteroid reduction program during a teleconference with the media. Leviticus Lewis, head of FEMA's National Response Coordination, said that an asteroid collision is one of the potential schemes we need to be ready for. He also added that the catastrophic impact of the asteroid is "a lesser possibility but a high branching occurrence" for which "a certain degree of vigilance is needed.

NASA's planetary defense officer, Lindley Johnson, said that this plan is not only intended to intensify the search for dangerous asteroids, but also to anticipate their possibilities of being a collision threat in the future. Johnson added that this program will help NASA to improve its efforts to describe asteroid diversion and alternative replacement skill and preferably validate in the US government the procedures and ownership for the distribution of the best available account so that timely decisions can be taken.