Ignore WW3 – these electric excavators are going TO THE MOON

Ignore WW3 – these electric excavators are going TO THE MOON


Engineering startups Astroport Space Technologies and Astrolab have successfully completed a real-world demonstration for their UTIPA Excavator – an all-electric machine designed to become the cornerstone of lunar construction solutions and pave the way for autonomous construction projects on the Moon.

Established equipment firms like Komatsu and Vermeer have been developing lunar construction and mining equipment for years – and the reason is helium. Helium plays a critical role in the manufacturing of semiconductors, chips, optics, and all the other stuff that makes EVs, autonomy, the Internet, and the rest of twenty-first century life possible. The problem is that, despite being the second-most common element in the universe, helium is pretty rare on Earth – and we are rapidly running out. As such, there are intense economic and political pressures to find new and reliable sources of helium somewhere, anywhere else, and that demand has sparked a new modern space race focused on harvesting helium on the Moon and getting it back home.

The race is on, then, to develop equipment assets capable of digging up lunar materials like rocks and sand from up to three meters below the surface, extract helium-3 (a light, stable isotope of helium believed to exist in abundance on the Moon), then package it, contain it, and ship it back to Earth, where we can turn it into stuff to sell like good little capitalists.

“We are excited to provide the mobility backbone for Astroport’s groundbreaking construction technology,” said Jaret Matthews, CEO of Astrolab. “Astrolab is dedicated to establishing a viable lunar ecosystem. By combining our FLEX rover’s versatility with Astroport’s civil engineering expertise, we are delivering the essential capabilities required for a sustainable lunar economy.”

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The Astroport excavator demo served as a foundational proof of concept for the UTIPA Excavator, which is specifically engineered to perform the kind of site preparation necessary for “mission assurance” on the Moon.

“Leading with this successful excavator demo proves that our technology is no longer theoretical—it is operational,” said Sam Ximenes, CEO of Astroport. “This is the first of many implements in development that will turn Astrolab’s FLEX rover into the ‘Swiss Army Knife’ of lunar construction. To meet the infrastructure needs of the emerging lunar economy, we must build the ‘Port’ before the ‘Ship’ arrives. By leveraging the FLEX platform, we are providing the Space Force, NASA, and commercial partners with a ‘Shovel-Ready’ construction capability to secure the lunar high ground.”

You can watch the excavator demo, which took place in January at the company’s San-Antonio HQ, in the Astroport-supplied video, below, then let us know what you think of space-based construction projects and their future in the comments.

Lunar excavator demo


SOURCE | IMAGES: XArc, via PR Newswire.


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