Government space agencies currently lack integrated, long-term strategies. I propose that commercial companies establish the necessary lunar infrastructure. Establishing and operating space infrastructure before scientific missions lowers costs and improves the success rates of all future operations.
The Necklace of Selene is the foundation for the first true Lunar Utility Company. By integrating a Lunar Starlink satellite layer for positioning and a recurring business model for surface services, the project transitions from a one-time construction into a permanent, multi-billion dollar revenue stream.
Just as Starlink revolutionized terrestrial connectivity, the Necklace of Selene acts as the Surface-as-a-Service (SaaS) platform for the Moon. Future missions will no longer be built from scratch; they will plug in to the existing lunar network.
Revenue Streams
The Connection Fee: Commercial landers from iSpace, Firefly, or Intuitive Machines pay a one-time fee to interface with Smart Splice stations.
The Power Meter: Charging per kilowatt-hour (kWh) for laser-beamed energy provided to third-party rovers. This eliminates the need for heavy on-board power generation.
The Data Tier: Subscription models for 5G/6G bandwidth. This includes low-bandwidth telemetry and premium 4K live-streaming or VR telepresence for terrestrial researchers.
Government Anchor Tenancy: NASA and ESA pay fixed annual base access fees to ensure Artemis astronauts have 24/7 power and communication redundancy.
Orbital Infrastructure: The Lunar Starlink (L-GPS)
To provide precise navigation within shadowed craters, the surface grid is supplemented by a small constellation of orbital nodes.
Deployment: Using the surplus mass capacity of Falcon Heavy launches, six L-Starlink microsats are deployed into Elliptical Lunar Frozen Orbits.
Positioning (L-GPS): These satellites provide a Lunar Positioning System (LPS), allowing rovers to navigate with centimeter-level precision even inside the Shackleton crater where Earth is not visible.
Backhaul Relay: Satellites act as a backup for the fiber grid. If a section of the surface cable is compromised, data automatically reroutes through the satellite mesh to the next active station.
The Gateway Pivot Opportunity
With the March 2026 NASA strategy shift de-emphasizing the Gateway station in favor of surface infrastructure, this project is an ideal landing spot for repurposed funding. This grid meets LunaNet specifications and exceeds them by adding power transmission to the relay service. An 800 million USD infrastructure investment targets the 3 billion USD annual cislunar economy projected for 2026.
Updated Executive Roadmap (April 2026 Edition)
Development Phase: 18 months.
Launch Phase: At least 3 missions using a Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy hybrid to establish the South Pole logistical base.
Connectivity Phase: Activation of L-Starlink orbiters and 5G surface mesh to initiate commercial data sales.
Completion Phase: The Golden Splice ceremony and ring closure for 24/7 power-as-a-service.
Monetization Phase: Media rights and utility fees achieve ROI and make the grid self-funding.
While others sell rides to the Moon, this model sells the electricity and information that makes the ride worth taking. It is the economic operating system of the Moon. This design relies on available technologies and completes deployment within 60 days. Using high-efficiency thermal storage, our rovers survive the lunar night without expensive nuclear sources. It is time to stop spending billions on short-term missions and start building the permanent infrastructure required for continuous 4K surface exploration.












