Thought this was just going to be another article about a con-artist making his millions by selling chunks of the moon to gullible buyers... but lower down in the article it says:
Well, on the face of it, this idea seems pretty far-fetched, but just supposed it were possible (in terms of EROEI, not in terms of money), what would the environmental impact be of importing tons and tons of helium 3 back to Earth? Would it be as clean and pollution-free as they allege? If this were carried out on a large scale (come on, bear with me on this sci-fi trip) then wouldn't such imports somehow raise the overall energy balance on the planet and cause a warming effect anyway (most would be converted to heat eventually)?Data collected from the Apollo Moon landings have indicated that large deposits of an extremely rare gas called helium 3 are trapped in the lunar soil.
Scientists believe that this helium 3 could be used to create a new source of almost inexhaustible, clean, pollution-free energy on Earth.
One of them is Dr Harrison Schmitt, a member of the 1972 Apollo 17 mission and the only trained geologist ever to walk on the Moon.
"A metric ton of helium 3 would supply about one-sixth of the energy needs today of the British Isles," he claims.
Plans are already afoot in the US and Russia to strip-mine lunar helium 3 and transport it the 240,000 miles (385,000km) back to Earth.
The Moon, claims Prof Jerry Kulcinski of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, could become the Persian Gulf of the 21st Century.
"If we had gold bricks stacked up on the surface of the Moon, we couldn't afford to bring them back. This material - at several billion dollars a ton - is what makes it all worthwhile."
Or shouldn't we be wasting time even discussing this sort of free-lunch fantasy?!