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The Next Thirty Years: A Business Vision
by Joe Schembrie
AstroTug Corporation

Seattle - July 19, 1999 - Thirty years ago, when the Apollo astronauts became the first humans to voyage to the Moon, they surveyed the lunar landscape and spoke of 'magnificent desolation.' Thirty years later, the Moon is still as desolate as they left it. Will it be that way thirty years from now?

Back in the 1960s, we had so many heady dreams that never came to pass. We thought that the Apollo missions would be followed up by regular flights to the Moon. There would soon be a refueling base, and then even colonies. Next stop: Mars.

Why not? The government was spending 5.7 % of the federal budget on the space program. Massive government spending would buy the rockets, the stations, the moon bases. The best and brightest, attracted to government service through selfless dedication, would plan every step. Enduring motivation would be provided through government-mandated goals of national prestige, defense, and science.

Then the taxpayers grumbled, and the ordering of governmental priorities was altered. Thirty years of space-advocate cheerleading for public funding has coincided with a seven-fold decline in NASA's budget and the indefinite postponement of trips beyond Earth orbit. The bad news is, today we're in competition before Congress with a million other bright ideas on how to spend other people's tax money -- and all of them are 'for the children.'

The good news is, today we no longer have to rely solely on government to advance the cause of human space exploration. The computer and communications revolutions are creating an ever-increasing demand for commercial satellites. A hundred-billion-dollar launch services market cries out for cheap access to space. And what a market that big wants, it usually gets.

Following is a brief scenario of how private enterprise might advance the human space endeavor. It's not a call for a government industrial planning agency. It's not a call for special subsidies. It's not the business plan of any one company. It's simply some speculations on how that much-maligned motivator known as 'short-term profit-seeking' may well lure us back to the Moon -- this time not just to plant footprints, but to establish cities.

The Personal Space Initiative begins with cheap access to space. Reusable Launch Vehicles are already being built which will replace the far more expensive throwaway vehicles presently used to launch satellites. Within the next four years, by 2004, surely one such vehicle will be orbiting payloads for less than $1000/pound.

First-generation RLVs will be too small to place large payloads directly into high orbit. Instead, they will launch satellite and orbital transfer fuel on separate flights into Low Earth Orbit. A teleoperated space tug, guided by humans and computers on the ground, will shepherd the satellite and fuel together and push them toward Geosynchronous Earth Orbit -- and beyond.

For such LEO-to-GEO transfers, ion propulsion in place of chemical-fuel propulsion will save thousands of pounds of fuel per space tug mission. With fuel transported from Earth into low orbit costing $1000/pound, millions of dollars will be saved per mission. NASA's Deep Space One probe has already proven that ion propulsion is feasible for inner solar system space flight. A reusable ion space tug can be built now and be ready for transorbital missions when RLVs need them, around 2005.

Yet ion propulsion is slow to accelerate, and can take a month or more pushing a satellite from LEO to GEO -- and time is a very critical cost issue when satellite depreciation and interest charges run to millions of dollars per month. An alternative, preferable source of high-thrust chemical fuel for orbital transfer missions can be found on the Moon, where lunar ice can be mined and converted into hydrogen-oxygen fuel by teleoperated equipment, and then transported by teleoperated vehicles down to LEO for only a few dollars per pound. 'Lunar Express' can be in service by 2007.

The satellite orbital transfer business will annually require hundreds of thousands of pounds of lunar ice/fuel to be shipped from Luna to LEO. Why couldn't humans ride to the Moon on the return trips? Perhaps by 2009, a human will revisit the Moon aboard a teleoperated moon shuttle.

Humans on the Moon will prospect for rare metals. For an overall transport cost which is a tiny fraction of their market value, gold, platinum, palladium, and even silver mined on the Moon can be lifted into lunar orbit with chemical rockets whose hydrogen-oxygen fuel is derived from lunar ice, and then towed down to LEO with ion space tugs, and then dropped from LEO to Earth's surface inside disposable atmospheric entry shells. Lunar rare metals -- a potential twenty billion dollar a year industry -- should be discovered by 2011.

In just four years, the California Gold Rush drew two hundred thousand people across a continental divide as formidable in the nineteenth century as the distance between Earth and Moon will be in the twenty-first. A multi-billion dollar lunar mining industry could afford and rapidly attract thousands of miners as soon as a major strike occurs. And with that $1000/pound shipping charge from Earth, there will be a powerful incentive to grow food, manufacture clothing, and construct habitats from local materials. Accomplishing those tasks of lunar self-sufficiency will be thousands of additional workers -- and entrepreneurs.

Lunar mining company executives will want to retain people rather than ship them up from Earth in rapid rotation, and that means making the lunar environment as hospitable as possible. Perhaps cities will resemble something along the lines of multiple stadium-like enclosures, with a transparent dome over a central parkland, ringed by condominiums and shops. The first such lunar atrium, housing as many as a thousand humans, could be erected by 2015.

As life on the Moon proceeds from magnificent desolation to comfortable self-sufficiency, and second-generation RLVs bring the cost of space access down to $100/pound or less, other reasons for lunar colonization open up. There's space tourism. There's old folks retirement (for those in their late seventies and older, low gravity can make the difference between an active and sedentary lifestyle). And the environmental laws will be looser and the taxes lower (we hope).

By 2030, the Moon could be speckled with numerous large domed ecospheres, filled with trees and lakes gleaming beneath the earthlight, populated by creative and industrious pioneers who consider themselves not so much the offspring of earthly states as the founding citizens of an interplanetary civilization.

The Apollo astronauts saw a barren, airless, lifeless world that made them glad to come home. The Moon has remained in that pristine but slaglike state for thirty years. But thirty years from now, there will be enterprises and cities, gardens and even young forests on the Moon.

How soon can this vision be realized? Ion tugs could be ready when RLVs are, and once teleoperated vehicles are in routine service to the Moon, it will be difficult to restrain humans from hitching rides. Creative individual initiative and the profit motive could make it all happen sooner than currently thought. What is certain is that the journey back to the Moon has already begun.

With appropriately directed enthusiasm, all of this will be achieved in the private sector, driven by market forces -- without grumbling taxpayers, without subsidies, without the 'guidance' of a central planning agency -- for much less cost than grandiose governmental efforts. Giant political leaps failed, but small private steps will not. There's just too much money to be made. That's why, thirty years from now, there will be regular flights to the Moon, and a refueling base, and even colonies. And perhaps well before that time, there will be an intrepid lunar entrepreneur with enough vision to say, "Next Stop: Mars."

Joe Schembrie, a lifelong space enthusiast, has a BS in Electrical Engineering and an MBA from the University of Washington. An engineer who has worked for the US Department of the Navy and the Boeing Airplane Company, he is currently President of Astrotug, a company dedicated to the development of teleoperated space tugs.

  • AstroTug Corp

  • Future of the Shuttle Conference - July 28, 1999
  • NASA's RLV Program
  • SpaceTech - SpaceDaily Special Report
  • RLV Alert - SpaceDaily Special Report




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    When "Meaning" Costs $50 Billion
    by Michael Martin-Smith
    Editorial - December 13, 1998 - It seems timely to stand back, and look at the International Space Station's significance. For, like the Great Pyramids and Cathedrals of previous ages, this project is one of Mankind's most significant constructions.

    There has been much debate about the value of the International Space Station. But with construction, after 15 years of political planning now finally underway, it is likely to proceed, with or without delays; calls for its cancellation are probably unrealistic.

    To establish its value, rather than merely its price, consider that in pure science, it is probably not worth the $50 Billion plus it will take to complete the current design.

    Astronomy/astrophysics is best done from unmanned platforms. However, the science results of Apollo took many years to become clear, and the same probably holds true for the space station.

    Biomedical sciences, crystal growth, and the processing of pharmaceuticals, semiconductors and the like were promised some years ago, but terrestrial manufacturing processes have improved, and the question of a "factory" that costs $50 billion to build remains unclear.

    However, we know that the human future depends on our expansion into the wider Cosmos. Asteroid Impacts, Volcanic Traps formation, emerging virus epidemics, and Ice Ages put this beyond dispute - for reasons of survival, let alone further development as a Mindful species. Thus very large engineering projects beyond Earth's space will become mandatory.

    Therefore, human societies must increasingly learn to work in close collaboration over long frames if an inter-planetary industrial base is to be assembled.

    One of the results of Apollo was that, for the first time, thousands of dispersed contractors, had to manufacture machine parts to a deadline, and to hitherto unheard of levels of precision.

    This must now be extended over some 15-20 years, between 16 nations, on four continents, for components which need to match perfectly, before assembly in orbit.

    This is a quantum leap in international longterm industrial and engineering, and will increasingly bind nations together where it counts - economically.

    The larger projects which are essential for the human future - solar power stations, habitats/resorts, Extraterrestrial mining bases, will all be more complex than the ISS - just as the ISS is more complex than what has gone before.

    Managing 45 construction flights, and assembling all the cargoes into a functioning unit will put astronautics on a very steep learning curve; the techniques that have been developed to design, build and eventually operate the space station will lead to the critical skills for building a space-faring civilization.

    The ISS will be an incentive to develop cheaper transport systems; since, once in place, most of the annual cost will be logistical. A 10-fold reduction in launch costs will facilitate processes now considered uneconomic on the ISS.

    Opening up parts of the operational ISS to commerce will generate unforeseen, imaginative, and high-value revenue streams.

    Apollo employed nearly 2 million people, and generated seven dollars for everyone that went up into Space. The Space Station is a larger and far more longterm project.

    To conclude; the main goal of the International Space Station is to develop our capacities to live, build, and work beyond Earth-space on a scale larger and longer than ever before. It is a step towards our evolutionary Cosmic Destiny - the alternative being decay and extinction.

    Michael Martin-Smith,physician, is an amateur astronomer, freelance writer, prospective Space tourist, and Founder of the UK Humble Space Telescope Project"

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