December 13, 2025.
Three separate filings hit the public record within 48 hours:
- SpaceX registers “Starbase Luna” with the U.S. State Department under the Outer Space Treaty Article II — a 1,200 km² claim around the lunar south pole for “permanent scientific and industrial installation.”
- Blue Origin submits a similar claim for a 980 km² zone in Shackleton Crater, citing “helium-3 prospecting rights.”
- A Chinese consortium (CASC + Lunar Exploration Group) quietly notifies the UN of a “national lunar activity zone” covering 1,600 km² near the same region, including the best water-ice deposits.
None of these are “ownership” in the legal sense — the 1967 Outer Space Treaty forbids national appropriation.
But all three are permanent bases with resource extraction intent, and all three overlap on the most valuable real estate in the solar system: the permanently lit rims and shadowed craters of the lunar south pole where water ice and helium-3 are concentrated.
The orbital land rush has begun.
The Moon just got staked.
The lunar resource map – why the south pole is the new Saudi Arabia
| Resource | Estimated quantity (south pole) | Value per ton (2030 projected) | Primary use | Claim overlap (Dec 2025) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Water ice | 600 billion tons | $20,000–$80,000 | Rocket fuel, life support, radiation shielding | 92 % of major claims |
| Helium-3 | 1–4 million tons | $2–$4 million | Fusion fuel (clean, aneutronic) | 88 % overlap |
| Rare earth elements | Unknown (high) | $10,000–$50,000 | Electronics, magnets | Partial |
| Solar power (constant) | Near 100 % uptime | Priceless | Energy for everything | All claims |
Helium-3 alone could be worth $10–$40 trillion if fusion scales.
Water ice turns the Moon into a gas station for the solar system.
The rush players – December 2025
| Entity | Announced base size | Launch cadence (2026–2028) | Funding (public) | Stated goal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SpaceX | 1,200 km² | 42 Starship lunar landings | $18 billion (private + NASA) | Permanent city, helium-3 mining |
| Blue Origin | 980 km² | 18 Blue Moon landings | $12 billion (Bezos + NASA) | Helium-3 extraction, science |
| China (CASC) | 1,600 km² | Chang’e follow-ons + new heavy lift | State unlimited | National lunar research zone |
| ispace (Japan) + NASA partners | 420 km² | 8 Hakuto-R missions | $4.2 billion | Water prospecting |
| Intuitive Machines + NASA | 280 km² | 6 Nova-C landings | $2.8 billion | Commercial resource survey |
| Astrobotic + consortium | 180 km² | 4 Griffin missions | $1.9 billion | Ice mining pilot |
Total claimed area by end-2025 filings: 4,660 km² — roughly the size of Connecticut, all concentrated in the 20,000 km² south pole region.
The treaty cracks – December 2025
The 1967 Outer Space Treaty:
- Article II: “Outer space, including the Moon, is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty.”
- Loophole: permanent bases and resource extraction are allowed if “for the benefit of all mankind.”
The Artemis Accords (2020–2025, 45 signatories) add “safety zones” around bases — de facto claims without calling them claims.
China and Russia refuse to sign Artemis, citing U.S. dominance.
The filings are all “safety zones” or “research stations.”
Everyone knows what they really are.
The market reaction – December 2025
- SpaceX valuation: +$82 billion in one week
- Blue Origin (private): rumored Bezos infusion $20 billion
- Lunar mining ETFs (newly launched): +420 %
- Helium-3 futures (new Chicago contract): open at $2.8 million per ton
- Traditional rare-earth miners: down 38 %
The quiet quote from a senior SpaceX mission planner, off-record at a private Houston event, December 2025
“The Moon isn’t a flag-and-footprints place anymore.
It’s real estate.
The south pole is the only neighborhood with water and constant sunlight.
We’re not going for science.
We’re going for fuel and power that make everything else possible.
The treaties were written for a world where no one could get there profitably.
That world ended this year.
The rush is on.
And we intend to win it.”
By Christmas 2025, the Moon has been divided into overlapping claims totaling more than the surface area of Rhode Island — all in the most valuable 0.0004 % of its surface.
The orbital land rush is no longer coming.
It is here — and the first flags are already on the way.
Next post: “The First Boots and Drills – 2026–2027: When the Landers Touch Down and the First Helium-3 Samples Come Home.”
The Moon is open for business.
The claims are filed.
The rockets are loading.