Radio
Now Playing
Quickyla Radio โ€” Click to play
Open โ†’
3 min left
Back to News

What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?

One of the most valuable assets owned by Lancaster University is stored in beer kegs. In a carefully locked laboratory rows of metal kegs are arranged on shelves and linked together with spindly copper pipework. The containers aren't loaded with prize beer but rather a gas call

What is Helium-3 and could we get it from the moon?
BBC Business โ€” 15 June 2026
Text:
2 0 0

One of the most valuable assets owned by Lancaster University is stored in beer kegs.

In a carefully locked laboratory rows of metal kegs are arranged on shelves and linked together with spindly copper pipework.

The containers aren't loaded with prize beer but rather a gas called helium-3, one of the most expensive materials in the world. A single litre costs roughly $2,000 (ยฃ1,500), though the price can fluctuate.

"The lab has been going for 50 years or so. Back then, the helium was quite cheap," says Dima Zmeev, senior lecturer. "Our very wise predecessors stocked up."

In the near future, more people could be looking to build up such a stockpile. Helium-3 has applications in quantum computing and nuclear fusion. However, the main source of it today is tightly controlled โ€“ it comes from nuclear weapons. Specifically, from the decay of tritium, a form of hydrogen, inside those weapons.

Around the world, tens of thousands of litres of helium-3 are likely to be produced this way every year, estimates David McCollum, distinguished scientist at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee. But future demand could far exceed that supply.

Some entrepreneurs and researchers say we need new sources of helium-3. It exists in the ground, though generally at very low concentrations.

However, samples of moon dust, or regolith, from the Apollo missions suggest it may be present there at relatively high concentrations. As such, plans are now afoot to recover helium-3 from the moon.

Advertisement
"The lab has been going for 50 years or so. Back then, the helium was quite cheap,"
โ€” BBC Business
React:
Sources
Sponsored

More to Read

CBS News insiders worry how 60 Minutes will endure after fiโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ’ฐ Business
CBS News insiders worry how 60 Minutes will endure after firings: โ€˜What are they going toโ€ฆ
Guardian Business ยท 11 days ago
How 'confused' AI rollout hurts firms and baffles staff
๐Ÿ’ฐ Business
How 'confused' AI rollout hurts firms and baffles staff
BBC Business ยท 14 days ago
OpenAI let ChatGPT aid and abet mass shooters, Florida lawsโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ’ฐ Business
OpenAI let ChatGPT aid and abet mass shooters, Florida lawsuit claims
BBC Business ยท 14 days ago
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemicalโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ”ฌ Science
'Astonishing': James Webb telescope spots the most chemically primitive galaxy in the ancโ€ฆ
Live Science ยท 15 days ago
Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billionโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Sam Altman says OpenAI's top token spender uses 100 billion tokens a month โ€” and they're โ€ฆ
Business Insider Mkt ยท 12 days ago
Intel, AMD, Micron shares sink as Broadcom results spark seโ€ฆ
๐Ÿ“ˆ Markets & Finance
Intel, AMD, Micron shares sink as Broadcom results spark semiconductor sector sell-off
Yahoo Finance ยท 11 days ago
Full view