In a move that cements the United Kingdom’s role in the next chapter of space exploration, Nasa’s Artemis programme will rely on critical British-built technology for its return to the lunar surface. The decision, announced this morning, places UK engineering at the core of humanity’s most ambitious off-world endeavour since Apollo.
The technology in question is a sophisticated navigation and communication system developed by Reaktive Technologies, a Bristol-based firm known for its work on resilient quantum sensors. The system, called the Lunar Positioning and Communication Unit (LPCU), will enable precise landing and real-time data relay for the Orion spacecraft and the planned lunar gateway station. Without it, the mission’s risk of landing in the wrong crater or losing contact with Earth would be unacceptably high.
This is not merely a subcontractor’s role. The LPCU is the brain of Artemis. It synchronises the spacecraft’s internal clock with Earth’s atomic time standards, using a quantum entanglement protocol that is immune to the interference of solar radiation. For the astronauts aboard, this means reliable GPS-like navigation 400,000km from home, and for mission control, it means never having to say “we’ve lost signal”.
The British government has touted this as a sign of the nation’s tech sovereignty. But let us be clear about what is at stake. The Artemis project is not a repeat of the 1960s flag-planting exercise. It is the foundation for a permanent human presence on the Moon, with mining operations for water ice and helium-3, and a staging post for Mars. The technology that runs Artemis will define the standards for every mission that follows. By embedding British engineering at this level, the UK secures a seat at the table for decades. The commercial implications are staggering. The LPCU design alone is expected to generate over £2 billion in licensing revenue by 2035.
Yet one must ask: who watches the watchers? The same quantum sensors that guide a lunar lander can, in theory, be repurposed for terrestrial surveillance. The entanglement protocol, while robust, creates a permanent data signature that is detectable from orbit. If the technology is locked into a US-led infrastructure, do we risk a new colonial dependency on American constellations? The Government’s answer is that the UK retains full IP ownership and that the system is encrypted to quantum standards. But encryption is only as good as the trust in the people who hold the keys.
This tension between innovation and control is the black mirror of every technological leap. We want to reach the stars, but we must ensure that the network we build there is not a gilded cage. The Artemis mission, for all its wonder, is a test of our digital sovereignty. If British tech is to be the backbone of lunar exploration, then British oversight must be woven into the governance of the entire programme. Not as a junior partner, but as a co-architect of a new off-world society.
For now, the engineers at Reaktive are focused on making sure the system does not fail. A single quantum bit flip could send a lander into a mountainside. Their solution is a triple-redundant error correction system that would make a blockchain enthusiast weep with envy. It is the kind of obsessive, British understated perfectionism that built the lunar rovers of the 1970s and the Mars landers of the 2000s.
As the Artemis launch window approaches in 2024, one thing is certain: the small package of electronics from a Bristol lab will carry the weight of a nation’s ambitions. If it works, we will look back on this as the moment the UK stopped being a spectator in space and became a builder of worlds. If it fails, we will learn something new about the Universe. Either way, the data will be our legacy.










