Deep SpaceStartupsTechnology

AstroForge Announces Asteroid Mining Test Missions

Image: AstroForge

Could this be the year of asteroid mining?

AstroForge, a YC W22 alum based in Huntington Beach, CA, is trying to make it happen. The company announced that it has booked two missions this year to get its asteroid mining tech to orbit and tested as quickly as possible.

Mining asteroids: About a decade ago, a few high-profile asteroid mining ventures failed to get off the ground, leading most to think the idea was neither investable nor commercially viable. Now, though, the cost of launch has dropped dramatically. And AstroForge CEO Matt Gialich thinks the time is right for another shot.

AstroForge closed a $13M seed round in May 2022 to develop and build its mining technology. The startup appears nearly ready to get the technology sent to space. 

“We’re not going to have multiple redundancies, we’re not going to think of this in the way of, ‘this mission cannot fail,’” Gialich told Payload then. “We have to go into this in the way of, ‘if this is successful, it will be highly profitable.’”

The 2023 timeline

Mission 1: The company’s first mission, currently set to launch in April of this year aboard a Falcon 9, will send a refinery into orbit to test its mining tech in microgravity. The refinery will come pre-loaded with an “asteroid-like material,” per the company’s blog post, which the refinery will vaporize and then pick out individual components.

Mission 2: The second mission, currently slated for October 2023, will head deeper into space to get eyes on a target asteroid for the company’s first mining expedition. 

This mission will launch on a SpaceX lunar rideshare. AstroForge tapped Intuitive Machines, OrbAstro, and Dawn Aerospace to provide components and services for the mission.

Related Stories
BusinessMilitaryTechnology

Anduril wins $99.7M Contract to Modernize SPACECOM 

Lattice uses machine learning and AI models to help operators track objects in space, giving SPACECOM a more resilient space surveillance tool.

StartupsTechnologyVC/PE

Inversion Raises $44M Series A To Build Its Arc

Inversion plans to use these funds to scale up its operations to deliver a full-scale reentry vehicle on orbit by 2026.

ScienceTechnology

Texas A&M Breaks Ground on New Space Institute 

The Space Institute will include lab and office space, classrooms, an auditorium, as well as two football-field sized landscapes that simulate the lunar and Martian surfaces.

ScienceStartupsTechnology

General Galactic Raises $8M Seed For Clean Fuel Tech

General Galactic wants to change the way the world thinks about the green transition, by using pollutants themselves as a renewable fuel source.