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Interlune, a Seattle, Washington-based company, develops technology to harvest helium-3 and other natural resources from the Moon's regolith for terrestrial use. Its leadership includes co-founders Rob Meyerson, former President of Blue Origin, Gary Lai, former Chief Architect at Blue Origin, and Harrison "Jack" Schmitt, an Apollo 17 astronaut. Founded in 2020, Interlune focuses on sustainable extraction using patent-pending machinery to support fusion energy, medical imaging, and quantum computing, aiming to establish an in-space economy. The company has secured over $33 million in seed funding, including a $15.5 million tranche in early 2024 and an earlier $15 million round led by Seven Seven Six. Interlune also holds letters of intent exceeding $1 billion for its lunar resources, with notable investors like Seven Seven Six, Aurelia Foundry Fund, and Liquid 2 Ventures.
Interlune has raised $16.0M across 1 funding round.
Interlune has raised $16.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Interlune has raised $16.0M across 1 funding round. Most recently, it raised $16.0M Seed in February 2024.
| Date | Round | Lead Investors | Other Investors | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feb 1, 2024 | $16M Seed | Seven Seven SIX | Dreamers VC, Serena Ventures, Chris M. Willliams, Aurelia Foundry Fund, Gaingels, Liquid 2 Ventures, Shasta Ventures | Announced |
Interlune has raised $16.0M in total across 1 funding round.
Interlune's investors include Seven Seven Six, Dreamers VC, Serena Ventures, Chris M. Willliams, Aurelia Foundry Fund, Gaingels, Liquid 2 Ventures, Shasta Ventures.
Interlune is a space technology company pioneering the commercialization of lunar resources, starting with helium-3 mining from the Moon to fuel industries like quantum computing, national security, clean energy, and medical imaging.[1][3] The company develops proprietary machinery for excavating, sorting, extracting, and separating resources, enabling smaller, lighter equipment that deploys in one launch, uses 10X less power, and supports applications like lunar oxygen extraction and 3D printing.[1][2] Interlune serves high-demand sectors facing Earth-based shortages of helium-3, solving supply constraints for advanced technologies while planning to expand to metals, rare earths, and water for a sustainable in-space economy.[1]
With patent-pending technology, Interlune addresses the scarcity of helium-3 on Earth—vital for ultra-low temperatures in quantum systems, nuclear detection, fusion fuel, and radiation-free lung MRI—by harvesting it abundantly from the lunar surface.[1] Early momentum includes core IP development and a commitment to responsible extraction, preserving the Moon as a shared heritage.[1]
Interlune emerged from the accelerating era of space development, aiming to harness lunar resources to rejuvenate life on Earth.[4] The company's backstory centers on visionary founders recognizing helium-3's potential: rare on Earth but plentiful on the Moon, it powers critical technologies amid growing demand.[1][3] Key pivots include developing novel processes to detect, extract, and return resources to Earth for the first time, with initial focus on helium-3 mining as the entry point to a broader in-space economy.[1][3]
Early traction stems from proprietary innovations like efficient excavation tech, positioning Interlune as the first to commercialize space resources responsibly, amid falling launch costs and rising lunar interest.[1][4]
Interlune rides the new space race trend, fueled by reusable rockets slashing costs and Artemis Accords enabling commercial lunar activity.[1] Timing is ideal: helium-3 demand surges with quantum breakthroughs, fusion progress, and medical needs, while Earth supplies dwindle—market forces like private lunar landers (e.g., from SpaceX, Blue Origin) create infrastructure tailwinds.[1] By commercializing cislunar resources, Interlune influences the ecosystem, kickstarting off-world supply chains that reduce Earth dependency, enable permanent Moon bases, and accelerate deep-space missions.[1][3]
Interlune is poised for lunar landings and first helium-3 shipments within years, scaling via partnerships and IP to dominate space mining.[1] Trends like fusion commercialization and quantum scaling will amplify demand, while regulatory frameworks (e.g., space resource rights) shape expansion—potentially evolving Interlune into the backbone of a universal economy.[1][3] As the pioneer unlocking space's riches, it promises unprecedented growth for Earth tech, tying back to its mission of sustainable prosperity through lunar abundance.[1]