Chinese astronaut Zhai Zhigang exits the Shenzhou-13 spaceship on April 16 after spending six months in orbit.

Chinese astronaut Zhai Zhigang exits the Shenzhou-13 spaceship on April 16 after spending six months in orbit.

Photographer: Cai Yang/Xinhua/Getty Images

China, US Are Racing to Make Billions From Mining the Moon's Minerals

The world’s top superpowers aren’t cooperating on rules of the road for extracting resources in outer space.

“There’s going to be a new world order out there, and we’ve got to lead it,” US President Joe Biden saidBloomberg Terminal after Russia’s war in Ukraine upended global geopolitics. Far from Earth, that transition is already happening.

Just like in the era of Sputnik and Apollo more than half a century ago, world leaders are again racing to achieve dominance in outer space. But there’s one big difference: Whereas the US and the Soviet Union hashed out a common set of rules at the United Nations, this time around the world’s top superpowers can’t even agree on basic principles to govern the next generation of space activity.