The cosmos has always been a theatre of human ambition, but in 2026, it has become something far more complex: a new frontier of geopolitical competition. The space race of the 21st century is not merely about flags and footprints. It is about strategic advantage, economic dominance, technological supremacy, and the struggle for influence over the final frontier. From the Moon to Mars, from asteroid mining to orbital infrastructure, nations and private companies are locked in an unprecedented contest that is reshaping the global balance of power.
What makes this new space race fundamentally different from the Apollo-era rivalry between the United States and the Soviet Union is the emergence of private-sector giants alongside traditional state actors. Companies like SpaceX, Blue Origin, and Relativity Space are no longer mere contractors for government programmes; they are primary drivers of exploration, innovation, and even policy. At the same time, China’s rapid advancement in space capabilities, India’s growing ambitions, and Europe’s quest for strategic autonomy have created a multipolar arena where alliances shift and competition intensifies.

The Geopolitical Stakes of Lunar Exploration
Perhaps nowhere is the new space race more visible than on the Moon. The Artemis Accords, led by the United States and now signed by over thirty nations, represent the most significant international framework for lunar cooperation since the Outer Space Treaty of 1967. However, the Accords have also drawn criticism for what some nations perceive as American-led norms that favour commercial exploitation over collective governance.
China, notably absent from the Artemis Accords, has been pursuing its own ambitious lunar programme through the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) initiative, partnered primarily with Russia and a handful of other nations. By 2026, China has already landed multiple robotic missions on the lunar far side and is actively scouting locations for a permanent crewed outpost targeted for the early 2030s. The strategic implications are profound: whoever controls the water ice at the lunar poles controls the future of deep-space propulsion, refuelling, and long-duration habitation.
Lunar resources are not merely scientific curiosities. Water ice can be converted into breathable oxygen, drinking water, and, crucially, hydrogen and oxygen rocket propellant. A permanent lunar refuelling station would dramatically reduce the cost of missions to Mars and beyond, creating a strategic chokepoint that any nation aspiring to deep-space exploration must consider. This is why both Washington and Beijing view the Moon not as a destination but as a gateway.
The commercial dimension adds further complexity. Private companies are now bidding for lunar contracts under NASA’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) programme, while Chinese state-backed firms are developing their own landers and rovers. This public-private hybrid model is accelerating timelines but also raising questions about regulation, property rights, and the risk of conflict in an environment with no established governance mechanisms.
The Rise of Commercial Space Powers
The private sector’s role in space has evolved from support to leadership. In 2026, SpaceX’s Starship programme has achieved regular orbital flight, dramatically reducing the cost per kilogram to orbit and enabling payloads that were unthinkable a decade ago. Blue Origin’s New Glenn rocket is operational, and Relativity Space’s fully 3D-printed Terran R is competing for commercial launch contracts. These companies are not just launch providers; they are building entire space ecosystems.
Satellite internet constellations, led by SpaceX’s Starlink and now joined by Amazon’s Project Kuiper and China’s GuoWang, are transforming global communications. But they also represent strategic assets. When a national internet infrastructure depends on a constellation controlled by a single company or foreign nation, the geopolitical leverage is immense. Ukraine’s reliance on Starlink during the war with Russia demonstrated this dynamic vividly, and policymakers in Europe, Asia, and Africa are now grappling with the implications of depending on privately owned satellite networks for essential connectivity.
Space debris mitigation, orbital slot allocation, and spectrum management have become pressing diplomatic issues. The number of active satellites in low Earth orbit has grown from roughly 2,000 in 2019 to over 12,000 in 2026, and the risk of cascading collisions — the Kessler Syndrome — is no longer theoretical. Nations are beginning to negotiate norms of behaviour, but the absence of a binding treaty leaves the domain dangerously unregulated.

Strategic Competition in Earth Orbit and Beyond
Beyond the Moon, Mars remains the long-term prize. NASA’s Artemis programme aims to use the Moon as a staging ground for crewed Mars missions in the 2030s, while China has announced its own Mars sample-return mission and long-duration crewed plans. But the competition extends to other celestial bodies as well. Asteroid mining, once the stuff of science fiction, is now a serious commercial prospect, with companies like AstroForge and Karman+ developing technologies to extract platinum-group metals from near-Earth asteroids.
The defence dimension of the new space race cannot be overstated. Space-based missile warning systems, reconnaissance satellites, and anti-satellite weapons have turned space into a potential battlespace. China’s test of a direct-ascent anti-satellite missile in 2026 — the third such test in five years — has heightened tensions and accelerated the development of counterspace capabilities by the United States, Russia, and India. The establishment of the U.S. Space Force as a separate military branch was only the beginning; similar organisations have now been created in France, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
Europe’s position in this new landscape is evolving. The European Space Agency (ESA) has historically been a science-first organisation, but the geopolitical pressures of 2026 are pushing it toward a more strategic posture. The recent launch of Europe’s IRIS² secure satellite constellation, designed to provide sovereign connectivity for EU member states, represents a significant shift. Europe is also developing independent launch capabilities and space-based earth observation systems that reduce dependence on American and Chinese assets.
The Regulatory Vacuum and the Risk of Conflict
Perhaps the most concerning aspect of the new space race is the lack of effective governance. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 remains the foundational legal framework, but it was designed for a world of two superpowers, not twenty spacefaring nations and dozens of commercial operators. Issues such as space resource rights, orbital traffic management, and the militarisation of space remain unresolved.
Efforts to negotiate new agreements have been slow. The UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS) continues to deliberate, but geopolitical divisions have prevented meaningful progress. The United States opposes any treaty that would restrict commercial activities, China and Russia advocate for a treaty to prevent the placement of weapons in outer space — while reportedly developing their own counterspace capabilities — and smaller nations worry about being excluded from the benefits of space exploitation.
The risk of accidental escalation is real. With thousands of satellites manoeuvring independently, the potential for miscalculation grows. A collision between a Chinese and an American satellite, even if accidental, could trigger a diplomatic crisis. The absence of agreed-upon communication protocols and deconfliction mechanisms leaves the domain dangerously fragile.
Conclusion: A Defining Challenge for the International Community
The new space race of 2026 is not a replay of the Cold War. It is a fundamentally different phenomenon, shaped by the interplay of state ambition and commercial enterprise, enabled by technological breakthroughs, and complicated by a governance vacuum that leaves the most consequential frontier in human history dangerously unregulated. The choices made in the coming years will determine whether space becomes a domain of peaceful cooperation and shared prosperity or a new arena for conflict and competition.
For context on how these geopolitical dynamics are reshaping alliances closer to home, read our analysis on Europe’s New Geopolitical Reality: NATO Expansion, Defence Spending, and the Reshaping of Global Alliances in 2026. The same forces driving the transformation of European security are also playing out in the race for the cosmos.
The nations and companies that establish responsible norms of behaviour, invest in collaborative frameworks, and resist the temptation to treat space as an extension of terrestrial rivalries will ultimately shape the future of humanity’s presence beyond Earth. The stakes could not be higher — because the decisions made in orbit and on the lunar surface today will echo for generations.







