A California-based company called OffWorld, whose ultimate goal is to enable “human expansion beyond our home planet,” is preparing for the initial phase of its extraterrestrial plans: mining the moon with a fleet of autonomous robots.
The company, which boasts a 26-person team according to Digital Trends, is one of several companies with sky-high ambitions.
The moon-mining industry has already begun to take off thanks to moonshot investments, but the industry still faces an interesting problem…
Scientists and entrepreneurs disagree on how prevalent minable resources are, how useful they could be, and how expensive it would be to commercially mine them.
Most plans focus on mining 3 main materials:
According to NASA, plans for space mining are “still guesswork.”
“There could be enough helium-3 to power the earth for 10,000 years,” the Washington Post reported. “Or there might not be enough to ever make commercial mining profitable, even if the entire lunar surface were being mined.”
A planetary geologist also points out that “most of the Moon’s… valuable metals are… essentially impossible to access,” and no one has yet developed a cost-effective way to transport any of those resources back to earth.
“The Moon is Earth’s 8th continent,” writes moon-mining startup Moon Express. “Like the Earth, the Moon has been enriched with vast resources. Unlike the Earth, these resources are largely on or near the lunar surface, relatively accessible.”
Here’s a quick rundown of the companies that have raised big bucks in the race:
You know what they say: Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss, you can always go back and raise another round of VC funding.