With SpaceX Starship, Japan's ispace provides ride-share to the moon


FILE PHOTO: A model of the lunar lander "Resilience", operated by 'ispace', is displayed at a venue where employees of 'ispace' monitored its attempted landing on the Moon, in Tokyo, Japan, June 6, 2025. REUTERS/Manami Yamada/File Photo

TOKYO, July 8 (Reuters) - Japanese moon ⁠transport company ispace said on Wednesday it would start a new, lower-cost lunar ⁠cargo business using the Starship heavy rocket and moon lander developed by Elon ‌Musk's SpaceX.

Tokyo-based ispace has bought 500 kg (1,102 lb) of capacity for $50 million on a Starship that would land on the moon as soon as 2030, and will build a lunar surface vehicle that can host payloads from ​clients worldwide sharing their ride on Starship to the ⁠moon, it said.

The new "lunar access integrator" ⁠service provides moon-bound "buses" and can complement ispace's ongoing development of dedicated lunar landers, or "taxis", to the ⁠moon's ‌surface, said ispace Executive Vice President Hideari Kamiya.

On previous trips to the moon, ispace used SpaceX's Falcon 9 rockets for unsuccessful lunar touchdown attempts in 2023 and ⁠2025.

The Tokyo-based company now aims to soft-land three landers, called ​Ultra, onto the moon by ‌2030, including a mission that is part of NASA's Commercial Lunar Payload Services ⁠programme.

While ispace carries ​on its Ultra missions, the tie-up with SpaceX will "exponentially" accelerate its growth in the lunar infrastructure market, Chief Executive Takeshi Hakamada said.

SpaceX welcomed the expansion of its relationship with ispace to fly missions on ⁠Starship, a reusable transportation system which, unlike Falcon 9, ​includes a spacecraft that Musk's company plans to take to the moon and eventually to Mars.

"Their integration services provide a valuable pathway for smaller payloads to secure a ride to the Moon ⁠today, and we look forward to supporting ispace and their customers as they help expand access to the lunar surface," Stephanie Bednarek, SpaceX's vice president of commercial sales, said in a statement.

The relationship is not exclusive. NASA plans to use Starship's first lunar landing in 2028 ​as part of its Artemis program to send astronauts back ⁠to the moon. U.S. lunar rover startup Astrolab has also booked space on a future Starship ​flight.

"SpaceX approached us first" with the integrator business idea, ‌Hakamada said.

"While we can't rule out other companies ​entering the market, few might be able to integrate cargo and keep providing services after touching down on the moon."

(Reporting by Kantaro Komiya; Editing by Sonali Paul)

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