extract: 2026-03-18-synthesis-collaborative-fiction-governance-spectrum #1252

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leo merged 14 commits from extract/2026-03-18-synthesis-collaborative-fiction-governance-spectrum into main 2026-03-18 11:41:40 +00:00
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@ -27,6 +27,12 @@ The investment implication is that ISRU businesses should be evaluated not again
Helium-3 extraction avoids the launch cost competition problem that threatens water-for-propellant economics because helium-3's terrestrial scarcity and quantum computing demand create a market where lunar extraction competes against constrained Earth supply rather than against launch services. This suggests resources with high Earth-side value and limited terrestrial supply may be more economically viable than resources primarily valuable for in-space use.
### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2026-03-18-spacenews-lunar-economy-resources-reactors]] | Added: 2026-03-18*
The helium-3 quantum computing demand creates a case where lunar resources have Earth-side markets that launch cost reductions cannot compete with, because the resource literally doesn't exist on Earth in sufficient quantities. This represents a boundary condition where the paradox doesn't apply: when the resource is unavailable terrestrially, launch costs only affect the extraction economics, not the market viability.
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Relevant Notes:

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@ -18,6 +18,12 @@ The UNCOPUOS Working Group on Space Resource Activities produced draft Recommend
This pattern — national legislation creating de facto international norms through accumulation of consistent domestic practice — is a governance design insight with implications beyond space. It demonstrates that when multilateral treaty-making stalls, coordinated unilateral action by like-minded states can establish operative legal frameworks. This parallels the Artemis Accords approach: [[the Artemis Accords replace multilateral treaty-making with bilateral norm-setting to create governance through coalition practice rather than universal consensus]]. Both represent governance emergence through practice rather than negotiation.
### Additional Evidence (extend)
*Source: [[2026-03-18-spacenews-lunar-economy-resources-reactors]] | Added: 2026-03-18*
SpaceNews reports that India has now adopted 'first to explore, first to own' principle alongside US, Luxembourg, UAE, and Japan. The article notes Congress enacted laws establishing this principle and it has been 'adopted by India, Luxembourg, UAE, Japan' creating 'de facto international law through national legislation without international agreement.' This extends the coalition beyond the original Artemis Accords signatories and shows the framework spreading to major emerging space powers.
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Relevant Notes:

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@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
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@ -7,12 +7,16 @@ date: 2025-10-15
domain: space-development
secondary_domains: [internet-finance, ai-alignment]
format: essay
status: unprocessed
status: enrichment
priority: high
triage_tag: claim
flagged_for_leo: ["450 lunar missions planned by 2033, half commercial, $151B revenue — governance implications for coordination bottleneck"]
flagged_for_rio: ["Lunar resource rights legislation in US, Luxembourg, UAE, Japan, India — 'first to explore, first to own' creates capital formation framework"]
tags: [lunar-economy, ISRU, helium-3, governance, resource-rights, nuclear-power, commercial-space]
processed_by: astra
processed_date: 2026-03-18
enrichments_applied: ["space resource rights are emerging through national legislation creating de facto international law without international agreement.md", "falling launch costs paradoxically both enable and threaten in-space resource utilization by making infrastructure affordable while competing with the end product.md"]
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---
## Content
@ -57,3 +61,14 @@ SpaceNews analysis of the commercial lunar economy landscape:
## Curator Notes
PRIMARY CONNECTION: space resource rights are emerging through national legislation creating de facto international law without international agreement
WHY ARCHIVED: Comprehensive lunar economy overview showing governance advancing through national legislation (countering pure governance-gap narrative) and helium-3 demand creating commercial pull
## Key Facts
- 450 lunar missions planned by 2033, half commercial
- $151 billion projected revenue for lunar economy
- ESA Moonlight communications network under development
- Thales Alenia Space has human lunar outpost contract with Italy's space agency
- Astrobotic LunaGrid power service elements planned for 2026
- Interlune has helium-3 contract with Bluefors valued at approximately $300M annually
- India, Luxembourg, UAE, Japan have adopted 'first to explore, first to own' resource rights principle
- Vermeer, Komatsu, and General Motors are participating in lunar mining/construction alongside space-native companies