International Spaceport Initiative

A Global Gateway to the Solar System

Why It Matters

To ensure space resource development benefits all of humanity—not just a few nations—we must begin with shared infrastructure. The International Spaceport will serve as the launch, coordination, and refueling hub for Earth’s joint mission into space.

Early Priority Project (2030–2040)

Location:

  • Ideally constructed at a low-latitude equatorial site (e.g., near the equator) for launch efficiency

  • Could include modular international branches in the U.S., Africa, South America, and Asia

Core Functions:

  • Launch pad and refueling station for robotic missions to the Moon and asteroids

  • Host for international research teams and orbital robotics

  • Neutral ground for coordination and policy development

  • Public education center to engage youth globally

Designed & Funded By:

  • A consortium of nations including the U.S., EU, Japan, India, Brazil, South Africa, and others

  • Each country contributes scientific, financial, or technical support

  • Operates under a shared governance model, similar to CERN or the International Space Station

Message to the World

“Before we claim a single asteroid or land on another planet, let us build something together on this one.

The International Spaceport will be Earth’s handshake to the stars.”