
Interlune, a stealth startup headed by ex-Blue Origin executives, is targeted on mining the moon for a uncommon isotope of helium that may very well be used to scale quantum computing and ultimately even fusion energy, TechCrunch has realized.
Regulatory filings reported right here final week confirmed that the corporate lately closed $15.5 million in new capital; earlier than that, Interlune had raised a $2.69 million pre-seed spherical. However the rationale for elevating the capital was poorly understood — till now.
Two of Interlune’s confidential pitch decks, dated spring 2022 and fall 2023 and seen by TechCrunch, reveal that the startup was in search of that funding to construct and take a look at useful resource extraction {hardware} for lunar helium-3 (He-3). A consultant for Interlune declined to remark.
Interlune says in the newest pitch deck that it has developed a “breakthrough extraction methodology” for He-3 from lunar regolith, although the slides don’t go into better element. Based on one slide, the startup is growing sedan-sized extractors mixed with different {hardware} to successfully make scalable bodily crops. There isn’t a clarification of how the helium may be saved, or the way it may be transported again to Earth, nonetheless.
He-3 is a secure isotope of helium; whereas Earth is shielded from photo voltaic wind by its magnetic discipline, the moon is bombarded with with it, and high-energy particles like He-3 are deposited onto the lunar floor. On Earth, the commonest supply of He-3 is from the decay of tritium, a man-made component utilized in nuclear weapons. Interlune predicts an “exponential” rise in demand for He-3 within the coming years, pushed by areas like quantum computing, medical imaging, in-space propellant and fusion, to the extent that it initiatives an annual demand of 4,000 kilograms by 2040 (versus simply 5 kilograms now).
The excellent news is that He-3 is as plentiful on the moon as it’s scarce on Earth. Mining the moon for He-3 will not be a brand new idea: Information collected because the Apollo mission reveals the isotope is plentiful there. However for years, it’s lengthy been thought-about the stuff of science fiction: Scientists have by no means come near growing the type of extraction know-how essential to make such an endeavor worthwhile. He-3 may very well be used to energy fusion reactors — an particularly engaging idea, because the byproducts wouldn’t be radioactive — however whereas nuclear fusion analysis has made main good points prior to now few years, it is going to take many extra steps to make fusion a commercially viable power supply right here on Earth (not to mention in area).
Different international locations have already began to look to our moon to resolve this drawback. Most notably, China introduced in 2022 that its Chang’e-5 robotic mission had collected a brand new moon mineral that contained He-3, suggesting even better reserves than beforehand thought.
China’s curiosity in He-3 mining creates a nationwide safety crucial to securing these huge tonnages of the useful resource on the moon — which may imply promising traction for Interlune from each authorities companies doling out non-dilutive authorities contracts and traders in search of a defense-focused angle.
Interlune’s govt workforce contains CEO Rob Meyerson, a prolific area trade investor and former president of Blue Origin; CTO Gary Lai, former chief architect at Blue Origin; and COO Indra Hornsby, with trade expertise at Rocket Lab, BlackSky and Spaceflight Industries. The startup has been in existence for at the very least three years, however past a number of temporary public statements, that is the primary time the general public has realized about its plans with any element.

Picture Credit: Interlune
The deck additionally says that Interlune is planning to display the tech on the moon as early as 2026, with a pilot plant extracting He-3 in 2028. Ought to the plans work out as the corporate hopes, it instructed traders it may see $500 million in annual recurring income from He-3 restoration by the beginning of the following decade — and solely going up from there.
However nonetheless, that is an costly plan: The corporate might want to pay for launch, safe a useful resource return accomplice and construct out the entire {hardware} vital to begin mining at scale. The economics, like the associated fee to mine a gram of helium, are additionally unclear. But when Interlune manages to drag it off, it will likely be in a class of its personal: There are different startups centered on in-space useful resource extraction, however they’re both centered on utilizing lunar assets purely for on-orbit functions (like Argo Area Company) or they’re centered on minerals solely (like AstroForge).