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Illustration of rockets launching and lunar infrastructure symbolizing the growing global space startup economy

SpaceX and Artemis fuel startup boom in $1.8T space race

9 April 2026 Science No Comments2 Mins Read
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Artemis and SpaceX ignite a new era for the space economy

The global space economy, already valued at around $1.8 trillion, is entering a transformative phase as NASA’s Artemis missions and a widely anticipated SpaceX IPO reshape investor appetite and entrepreneurial ambition.

Analysts argue that these two forces – a renewed push for lunar exploration and the public listing of one of the world’s most influential space companies – will create fertile ground for a new generation of startups building infrastructure, software and services for orbit and beyond.

Artemis missions: building the lunar and cislunar market

Through NASA’s Artemis program, the United States aims to return humans to the Moon, establish a sustained presence on and around the lunar surface, and use that foothold as a stepping stone to Mars. This long-term roadmap requires a vast supporting ecosystem that extends far beyond traditional prime contractors.

Emerging companies are already targeting niches such as lunar logistics, in‑situ resource utilization, space robotics, and radiation‑hardened electronics. As Artemis progresses from test flights to crewed missions and permanent infrastructure, demand is expected to surge for agile startups that can supply components, data, and specialized services at lower cost and higher speed than legacy players.

SpaceX IPO: unlocking capital and public market validation

A potential public offering of SpaceX – or of its satellite internet arm Starlink – is viewed by many investors as a watershed moment. A successful IPO would not only crystallize value for existing shareholders, but also provide a powerful benchmark for valuing other space ventures.

Public market validation of launch services, satellite constellations and space-based communications could channel fresh capital into upstream and downstream startups alike. Venture funds and institutional investors that previously treated space as a niche or speculative sector may increasingly view it as a core allocation, comparable to other high-growth technology verticals.

Startups at the intersection of deep tech and infrastructure

The most promising opportunities are emerging where deep tech meets critical infrastructure. Founders are building companies in space situational awareness, de‑orbiting and debris mitigation, AI‑driven Earth observation analytics, and on‑orbit servicing. These businesses benefit directly from increased launch cadence and the expanding network of satellites and platforms enabled by Artemis and SpaceX.

For entrepreneurs and investors, the message is clear: as the space economy scales from hundreds of billions to multiple trillions of dollars, today’s policy decisions, flagship missions and capital markets events are laying the foundations for the next wave of space‑enabled startups.

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Elyse Christian

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