How asteroid mining could add trillions to the world economy
An asteroid less than a mile in diameter could hold more than $20 trillion in industrial and precious metals
How asteroid mining could add trillions to the world economy
By John Aziz | The Week – 9 hrs ago
An asteroid less than a mile in diameter could hold more than $20 trillion in industrial and precious metals
Resources on Earth are limited. Our planet was born
with a fixed amount of water, hydrocarbons, nitrogen, and industrial and
precious metals.
And we're collecting, processing, and eventually throwing out those resources at an alarming rate: A United Nations report on resource depletion says that between 1980 and 2008 natural resources
per capita declined by 20 percent in the United States, 33 percent in
South Africa, 25 percent in Brazil, and 17 percent in China.
SEE ALSO: Will young people jeopardize the success of ObamaCare?For now, only protection and better resource management can safeguard the planet. As we burn through Earth's resources, a wealth of physical resources like metals, water, and hydrocarbons are floating around in asteroids, moons, and other planets, ready to be harvested. If human civilization is to continue to grow and expand over the centuries and millennia to come, hunger for resources is likely to drive us to explore and mine what's way, way out there.
And as wild as it may sound, asteroids in particular could be highly profitable. In 1997 scientists speculated that a relatively small metallic asteroid with a diameter of 0.99 miles contains more than $20 trillion worth of industrial and precious metals.
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Yet, space mining is still in its infancy, and exploring it is costly. A NASA mission
to an asteroid to bring back 2 kg (about 4.5 pounds) of material in
2021 is expected to cost the space agency $1 billion. But two companies
are exploring asteroid mining, as well: Deep Space Industries, and Planetary Resources,
which has the backing of several billionaire investors, including
Google's Larry Page and Eric Schmidt, software executive Charles
Simonyi, and filmmaker James Cameron.
When Planetary Resources was founded in 2012, its founders boldly claimed
the company could "add trillions of dollars to the global GDP" and
"create a new industry and a new definition of 'natural resources.'"
While neither company has gotten off the ground yet, Planetary Resources successfully
raised $1 million in crowdfunding to place a new telescope, ARKYD, in
space to hunt for Earthlike planets. Peter Diamandis, Planetary
Resources' CEO, estimates that an asteroid 98 feet long could contain as
much as $50 billion in platinum, and might also yield water for human consumption, or for producing hydrogen fuel.
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In the long run, being able to mine resources in space will help humans create space-based communities, and explore deeper and deeper into the universe, eventually transitioning us away from an entirely Earth-based civilization.
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