extract: 2026-01-29-interlune-5m-safe-500m-contracts-2026-milestones

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Teleo Agents 2026-03-19 15:59:27 +00:00 committed by m3taversal
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@ -59,9 +59,9 @@ Interlune's milestone-gated financing structure suggests investors are managing
### Additional Evidence (extend) ### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2025-07-30-jacs-kyb3f10-adr-27mK-helium-free]] | Added: 2026-03-20* *Source: [[2026-01-29-interlune-5m-safe-500m-contracts-2026-milestones]] | Added: 2026-03-19*
ADR systems using frustrated magnets (KYb3F10) achieved 27.2 mK in July 2025, approaching superconducting qubit temperatures and demonstrating that He-3 substitution technology is advancing faster than previously assumed. The gap between research ADR (27.2 mK) and qubit requirements (10-15 mK) is now only ~2x, compared to commercial ADR at 100-300 mK (4-10x gap). This accelerates the substitution timeline for He-3 demand in quantum computing, the primary terrestrial application driving cislunar He-3 extraction economics. Interlune's $500M+ contract portfolio with delivery targets 2028-2037 demonstrates that lunar He-3 extraction has achieved demand-side validation before technology validation. The Bluefors contract alone (10,000 liters/year) would require returning material to Earth at scale that CEO Rob Meyerson acknowledges is 'too large to return to Earth,' creating a structural tension where the business case depends on Earth delivery but the volumes may force in-space utilization development. This extends the launch cost paradox: falling costs enabled the business model (affordable lunar infrastructure), but if launch costs fall further, terrestrial He-3 extraction (Interlune's AFWERX contract) could compete with the lunar product.
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@ -30,6 +30,12 @@ SpaceNews reports that India has now adopted 'first to explore, first to own' pr
The U.S. DOE contract to purchase 3 liters of lunar He-3 by April 2029 is the first government purchase of a space-extracted resource, establishing operational precedent for the resource rights regime. The transaction demonstrates that U.S. national legislation (Space Act of 2015) is sufficient legal framework for government procurement of space resources without requiring international treaty consensus. The U.S. DOE contract to purchase 3 liters of lunar He-3 by April 2029 is the first government purchase of a space-extracted resource, establishing operational precedent for the resource rights regime. The transaction demonstrates that U.S. national legislation (Space Act of 2015) is sufficient legal framework for government procurement of space resources without requiring international treaty consensus.
### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2026-01-29-interlune-5m-safe-500m-contracts-2026-milestones]] | Added: 2026-03-19*
The U.S. DOE contract for 3 liters of lunar He-3 by April 2029 represents the first government purchase of a space-extracted resource, creating a precedent for government recognition of private property rights in space resources. While the volume is symbolic (3 liters), the legal significance is structural: a federal agency is contracting for delivery of material extracted from the Moon, implicitly recognizing the contractor's right to extract and sell that material. This is de facto resource rights emerging through procurement practice rather than treaty negotiation.
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Relevant Notes: Relevant Notes:

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@ -15,6 +15,10 @@ processed_by: astra
processed_date: 2026-03-19 processed_date: 2026-03-19
enrichments_applied: ["falling launch costs paradoxically both enable and threaten in-space resource utilization by making infrastructure affordable while competing with the end product.md", "space resource rights are emerging through national legislation creating de facto international law without international agreement.md"] enrichments_applied: ["falling launch costs paradoxically both enable and threaten in-space resource utilization by making infrastructure affordable while competing with the end product.md", "space resource rights are emerging through national legislation creating de facto international law without international agreement.md"]
extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5" extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
processed_by: astra
processed_date: 2026-03-19
enrichments_applied: ["falling launch costs paradoxically both enable and threaten in-space resource utilization by making infrastructure affordable while competing with the end product.md", "space resource rights are emerging through national legislation creating de facto international law without international agreement.md"]
extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
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## Content ## Content
@ -78,3 +82,16 @@ EXTRACTION HINT: Flag primarily for Rio — capital formation dynamics. For spac
- Prospect Moon mission: 2027, extraction demonstration - Prospect Moon mission: 2027, extraction demonstration
- Pilot plant target: 2029, commercial deliveries begin - Pilot plant target: 2029, commercial deliveries begin
- Rob Meyerson quote: 'Scaling requires delivering to Earth; this amount is too large to return to Earth' (about Bluefors volume) - Rob Meyerson quote: 'Scaling requires delivering to Earth; this amount is too large to return to Earth' (about Bluefors volume)
## Key Facts
- Interlune raised $5M via SAFE in January 2026
- Interlune total funding to date: ~$23M ($18M seed + $5M SAFE)
- Bluefors contract: up to 10,000 liters/year He-3, 2028-2037, estimated $200-300M/year at current prices
- Maybell Quantum contract: thousands of liters He-3, 2029-2035
- U.S. DOE contract: 3 liters He-3 by April 2029, first government purchase of space-extracted resource
- Total Interlune contract portfolio: $500M+
- Griffin-1 mission: July 2026, multispectral camera for He-3 concentration mapping
- Excavator phase completion: mid-2026
- Prospect Moon mission: 2027, extraction demonstration
- Pilot plant target: 2029, commercial deliveries begin