The Peaks of Eternal Light: a Near-term Property Issue on the Moon
Martin Elvis, Tony Milligan, Alanna Krolikowski

TL;DR
This paper discusses the legal, ethical, and scientific implications of near-term property claims on the Moon, focusing on the Peaks of Eternal Light and their potential use for scientific infrastructure like telescopes.
Contribution
It introduces the concept of near-term property issues on the Moon, especially regarding the Peaks of Eternal Light, and analyzes their implications from multiple perspectives.
Findings
Placement of telescopes on Peaks of Eternal Light could lead to de facto property claims.
Current space law has indeterminacies that may allow quasi-property rights on lunar features.
Addressing these issues requires scientific, ethical, and policy considerations.
Abstract
The Outer Space Treaty makes it clear that the Moon is the province of all mankind, with the latter ordinarily understood to exclude state or private appropriation of any portion of its surface. However, there are indeterminacies in the Treaty and in space law generally over the issue of appropriation. These indeterminacies might permit a close approximation to a property claim or some manner of quasi-property. The recently revealed highly inhomogeneous distribution of lunar resources changes the context of these issues. We illustrate this altered situation by considering the Peaks of Eternal Light. They occupy about one square kilometer of the lunar surface. We consider a thought experiment in which a Solar telescope is placed on one of the Peaks of Eternal Light at the lunar South pole for scientific research. Its operation would require nondisturbance, and hence that the Peak remain…
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