Why we’re going to the Moon (again)
If everything goes to plan (pretty big ‘if’ these days), NASA’s Artemis II mission will take off from Florida’s Kennedy Space Centre aboard a 98m (322ft) rocket during a two-hour window later today (Wednesday), from 18:24 ET.
Destination? The Moon.
It’s a fly-by rather than landing, but still significant for a couple of reasons:
Slingshotting around the Moon, the astronauts will end up 400,000km (250,000mi) from Earth, the farthest humans have ever ventured, and
One of those four astronauts (Canada’s Jeremy Hansen) will be the first non-US citizen to leave Earth’s orbit.
But the mission is really part of a dress-rehearsal for Artemis IV (maybe 2028?), which aims to put folks back on the Moon for the first time since 1972. And that’s all a stepping stone to Mars, though NASA hasn’t gotten around to coining a cool Greek program name yet.
So… where’s the intrigue?
Recall that last century’s Apollo program (all 11 of them) aimed to a) beat the Soviets, b) demonstrate US technological and industrial supremacy, and thereby c) signal the broader superiority of the US political and economic system (free market democracy).
We mention all this because in Greek mythology, Apollo had a twin sister called… Artemis. And as today’s sister program, Artemis shares Apollo’s aims beyond walking the Moon: she’s likewise chasing an aura boost (Gen Z, did we use that correctly?) in a tense world.
But there are a few key differences. First, this is less about a flags-and-footprints repeat of Apollo, and more about establishing a sustainable, long-term lunar presence — or to put it another way, it’s about who sets the rules for the next century of space exploration.
Second, Artemis has a bigger economic component via its vision for a lunar economy, extracting lunar resources, and leveraging more US businesses along the way. Or to put it another way, it’s about who gets the benefits from space and its exploration.
But also third, the competition now looks different.
Today’s primary rival is China, targeting its first crewed lunar landing by 2030, followed by a permanent south-pole base for resource extraction.
The Russians are still there too, though looking wobbly after their big 2023 lander crash, plus last November’s accident at their only crewed launch pad (repairs are ongoing).
The two neighbours also work together on the International Lunar Research Station, the planned nuclear-powered rival to Artemis, nominally scheduled for 2035.
But their aims in space? Similar to America’s, though with some key additions:
Moscow and Beijing are signalling to a hedging world that you can skip the chaos and decadence of Western democracy, and still deliver high-tech triumphs
They’re also signalling to their own citizens back home that maybe one-party, strongman rule offers the best path to national greatness, and
For Putin specifically, a space program (like a nuclear program) also helps him cosplay as a world player amid his failing invasion of a much smaller neighbour.
Meanwhile, of course, there are others now gunning for space, too, whether India and Japan (who’ve already achieved an uncrewed lunar landing), or the EU (aiming to join that club in 2030).
And sure, all three cooperate with the US — including via Artemis — but if you read their strategies, they’re all really chasing space autonomy more than leadership: ie, in a multipolar world, they’re prioritising space access without overreliance.
All this to say that in today’s world, that Moon above now feels much less like a finish line.
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