Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 16
Interlune Targets 2027 Lunar Helium-3 Extraction as It Lands $300 Million Supply Deal
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · Jun 16

Interlune Targets 2027 Lunar Helium-3 Extraction as It Lands $300 Million Supply Deal

3 articles · Updated · BBC.com · Jun 16

Summary

  • Interlune says its helium-3 extraction kit could be integrated into a lunar lander by autumn 2027, advancing a plan to mine moon regolith for the scarce isotope.
  • A $300 million agreement with a Helsinki-based quantum computing company would have Interlune deliver 10,000 litres a year from 2028 to 2037, tying the project to expected demand from quantum machines.
  • Helium-3 now costs about $2,000 per litre and is mainly sourced from tritium decay in nuclear weapons, with scientists warning future demand for quantum computing and fusion could outstrip that limited supply.
  • Apollo samples suggest the moon contains helium-3, but concentrations remain uncertain; estimates of only a few parts per billion imply processing hundreds of thousands of tonnes of regolith for 1 kilogram.
  • Interlune, led by former Blue Origin president Rob Meyerson, is one of several firms chasing new supply, though some researchers are pursuing helium-3 alternatives or easier terrestrial sources such as Minnesota.

Insights

Will terrestrial sources and new technologies make the costly lunar Helium-3 rush obsolete before it even begins?
Is the lunar Helium-3 market a visionary investment or a high-risk bubble built on unproven 'mountain-moving' technology?

The $300 Million Lunar Helium-3 Deal: How Bluefors and Interlune Are Launching the First Commercial Moon Mining Era

Overview

In a historic first, Finnish tech firm Bluefors has signed a $300 million deal with Interlune to purchase tens of thousands of liters of Helium-3 from the Moon, marking the largest commercial space resource agreement to date. This partnership is a major step toward building a lunar resource economy. Bluefors, a leader in ultracold refrigerator systems essential for quantum computing, will use the lunar Helium-3 in its quantum cryogenic systems. These systems are crucial for reaching near-absolute-zero temperatures, enabling breakthroughs in scientific and medical research within the quantum technology sector.

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