Jeff Bezos ambitions to colonize moon
Just like Elon Musk, the world richest man also has his own set of extraterrestrial dreams. Amazon CEO Jef Bezos spoke at the Space Development Conference in Los Angeles where he said that his company Blue Origin will work with NASA and European Space Agency to put humans on the moon, at least, start the colonization.
However, inhabiting moon is just a part of the bigger picture Bezos has in his mind. And that includes people working in hollowed-out asteroids.
He said we could use the earth for living and lightweight industry while the heavy industry would be shifted to solar-powered space stations. This could happen in the “not-too-distant future”, maybe the 100 years because “we’ll have so much energy” to do things we currently do on earth in space.
This is actually the need considering the rapid pace at which the earth’s resources are being exploited. But why Moon? Because it’s conveniently located and easily reachable. Moreover, deposits of water ice have been discovered near the moon’s pole that could be turned into drinkable water and propellants for rockets.
“It’s almost like somebody set this up for us,” he said.
Blue Origin is designing a lunar lander capable of delivering 5 ton of payload to the Moon. That’s enough for transporting humans. But if the moon lander has to take its maiden flight by mid-2020s, support is required. The company aims for a public-private partnership with NASA to achieve its goals.
“By the way, we’ll do that, even if NASA doesn’t do it.”
Bezos also admires the European Space Agency’s idea of a “Moon Village” where different nations working in harmony could have their lunar outposts in close proximity.
The CEO is spending a big chunk of his money to fuel Blue Origin and his space ambitions. He would do so until “other people take over the vision, or I’ll run out of money.”
Bezos has big plans for the moon if he can just get there. With a little elbow grease our trusty satellite could become a platform from which to build out the space industry — and while a partnership with NASA, the ESA and others would be best, Blue Origin will do it solo if it has to.
Speaking at the Space Development Conference in Los Angeles with the inimitable Alan Boyle, Bezos chatted about the idea of making the moon a centre for heavy industry, which he thinks will help conserve resources here on Earth.
“In the not-too-distant future — I’m talking decades, maybe 100 years,” he said, “it’ll start to be easier to do a lot of the things that we currently do on Earth in space because we’ll have so much energy. We will have to leave this planet. We’re going to leave it, and it’s going to make this planet better.”
There’s plenty that Earth will still have to provide — minerals and resources that can’t be sourced from the moon — but in other ways, a lunar manufacturing base is a no-brainer, he explained.
There’s sunlight 24/7 for solar cells, water sequestered beneath the surface, and plenty of lovely regoliths to build with (just don’t breath in the dust). “It’s almost like somebody set this up for us,” he said.
Bezos has already proposed a public-private partnership between Blue Origin and NASA to create a moon lander to test the possibilities of lunar manufacturing and habitation. It would be capable of delivering five tons of payload to the moon’s surface, more than enough to get some serious work done there.
That’s all still highly speculative, of course, and the rockets produced by the company are all still strictly suborbital. New Glenn, the orbital successor to the smaller-scale New Shepard, is scheduled to fly in the 2020s, but clearly, Bezos sees no reason to wait until then to start working on what it may eventually bring to the moon.
When the time comes, he hopes that lunar residence and industry will be a shared privilege, with countries working together in a “lunar village” and combining their strengths rather than testing them against one another.
In the meantime he’s funding Blue Origin with his own money to pursue these lofty ambitions. And he’ll keep going, he said, until someone else picks up the ball or he goes broke — and he and Alan agreed that the latter seems unlikely.



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