Canadian company’s winning innovation a giant leap for drinking water on the moon
MONTREAL — On the moon, access to drinking water could mean the difference between short visits and a permanent human presence, and a Canadian company’s award-winning invention has made colonizing Earth’s natural satellite more within reach.
“There’s no shortage of challenges to purifying water in space,” Daniel Sax, CEO of Canadian Strategic Missions Corporation, said in a recent interview. ”We were able to develop a system designed to operate in the moon’s extreme conditions.”
His company’s invention — called LunaPure — won a competition in April run by the Canadian Space Agency, which had invited companies across the country to design technologies capable of extracting and purifying water on the moon.
Every kilogram sent into space carries extraordinary cost, and the stakes are high: a viable solution for accessible drinking water could drastically cut the need for resupply missions — and help turn the idea of long-term lunar living into reality.
