New ‘Moon Race’ is not just about the US and China 

Return to the Lunar surface will offer other nations the opportunity to engage in international cooperation

NASA’s Artemis program aims to return humans to the Moon for the first time in more than 50 years with the first landing scheduled for 2025. This goal is not just technically ambitious, but it’s also politically challenging. 

The project marks the first time since the Apollo project that an effort to send humans to the Moon has been supported by two successive American presidents.

As a scholar of international affairs who studies space, I’m interested in understanding what allowed the Artemis program to survive this political transition where others failed. My research suggests that this initiative is not just about advancing science and technology or inspiring the public

It also offers practical benefits for the commercial sector and the military, and an opportunity to reinforce the United States’ global leadership.

Several companies around the world, including both startups and established aerospace firms, have begun working on missions to the Moon. Some, like Japan-based iSpace and US-based Astrobotic, are developing commercial lunar landers and have plans to eventually collect resources, such as water or minerals.

For now, efforts to return to the Moon are largely funded by government space agencies, like NASA or the European Space Agency. Yet many experts talk about the growth of a “cislunar economy,” where companies make money through their activities in and around the Moon.

Space programs

Expert studies suggest that it will be decades before many activities – such as mining lunar resources or collecting solar energy – will generate profits. 

But in the meantime, government space programs can leverage commercial innovation to cut costs, spur innovation and accelerate their programs. And some commercial activity, such as lunar tourism, may be profitable in the near future

SpaceX has already sold one trip to the Moon, tentatively scheduled for launch in 2024.

Companies entering the market early may have an advantage. Crowding is unlikely to be an issue in the near term – the Moon has a surface area roughly equivalent to the entire Asian continent. Even at the poles, multiple sites offer access to both water ice and solar illumination.

However, the first companies on the Moon may set precedents for the extent of lunar mining allowed, as well as the safety and sustainability protocols that others coming later may follow. 

The United Nations has established a working group to examine the legal issues related to using space resources, but it won’t finish its first set of proposed principles until 2027. 

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In the meantime, commercial entities are already attempting to land on the Moon.

Back in 2020, the head of the US Space Force referred to the Moon as “key terrain,” and the Air Force Research Laboratory is funding an experimental satellite called Oracle, scheduled for launch in 2026. 

Oracle will monitor the space between the Earth and the Moon.

The U.S. military has decades of experience in monitoring spacecraft orbiting the Earth. It could use this expertise to support safety and security as commercial and civil governmental activity near the Moon increases. 

They could also provide the United States with better intelligence on the space activities of strategic competitors, like China.

Some individuals in the space sector go further and suggest that the military should watch for weapons hidden in deep space or on the far side of the moon. However, the physics and economics suggest that this is costly, with little practical benefit.

Commercial goals

While leveraging US military expertise makes sense, there are reasons not to take developments in this area too far. 

Military advances like these – even if done in support of civil and commercial goals – may raise suspicion from other nations. This could potentially lead to increased military space activity on their part, and ultimately increase tensions.

The Apollo program is famous for its role in the US and the Soviet Union’s mid-20th century “space race.” 

The United States’ ability to land humans on the Moon was interpreted by many around the world as evidence of American technological superiority and the capabilities of a democratic and capitalist society

Some have suggested that Washington is now in a new space race, this time with Beijing. China recently accelerated its plans to send humans to the Moon.

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While not everyone agrees that such a race is taking place, the use of this terminology by American political leaders, including NASA Administrator Bill Nelson, and the global media coverage suggest that many will view efforts to land humans on the Moon in this way. 

If China does that before the United States, people around the world may see this as evidence of its role as a global leader and the capabilities of the Communist Party government.

But the return to the Moon is not just about competition. It also offers nations opportunities to engage in international cooperation. 

More than 20 nations have announced plans to undertake missions to the Moon. Just as the US is leveraging commercial developments, it is working with international partners, as well. 

Europe, Japan and Canada have already joined up to the Lunar Gateway, a space station that will orbit the Moon, with the first modules expected to launch in 2025.

The US is also seeking international support for the Artemis Accords, a set of principles for responsible lunar exploration and development. As of July, 27 nations had signed the accords.

Close allies 

This includes not just close allies like the United Kingdom, Canada and Japan, but also less traditional partners, such as Rwanda, Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates. India’s signing in June strengthened ties with the US. 

It’s worth noting that China’s lunar program also emphasizes international engagement. In 2021, Beijing announced plans to develop the International Lunar Research Station in partnership with Russia and invited other nations to join, as well. 

Sweden, France, Italy, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates are all participating in China’s upcoming lunar lander mission.

Ever since humans last left the Moon in 1972, many have dreamed about the days when people would return. But for decades, these efforts have hit political roadblocks. 

This time, the United States’ plans to return to the Moon are likely to succeed – it has the cross-sector support and the strategic importance to ensure continuity, even during politically challenging times.

Mariel Borowitz is an Associate Professor of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology in the United States.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy of China Factor.