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Are we entering a new Space Age?

The world’s most prolific billionaires are becoming further invested in the space industry. But is privatising the space race the right thing to do?

It seems that we’ve entered a new boom era for interstellar exploration. Apparently not content with mere world domination, Amazon founder and official Scrooge McDuck Jeff Bezos is beginning to rival everyone’s favourite memelord, Elon Musk, in the quest to become the billionaire that owns space. This week Bezos unveiled his Blue Moon lunar lander – a funky little craft designed to take people and payloads to the surface of (you guessed it) the moon.

The Blue Moon mission was conducted by Blue Origin, Bezos’ own privately funded Aerospace technology company.

Despite the fanfare that accompanied the event, Bezos is probably the billionaire that keeps quietest about his astronomical achievements. Musk is much more vocal about the numerous successes (and failures) of his own company SpaceX.

SpaceX has launched nearly 70 rockets to date and has won contracts with NASA and the US Air Force. It’s also been responsible for an astonishing number of rockets exploding at launch. So much so that Musk himself put together a complilation of his rockets combusting at launch…

It’s clear that the end goal of these private companies is, eventually, to commercialise space travel. Sir Richard Branson and PayPal founder Peter Thiel have also been clear about their designs on outer space, with Branson declaring space tourism an ‘inevitability’.

But the idea of privatising the space industry has some people nervous. Private businesses clearly have very different motives to government run programs. Whilst NASA’s funding can be directed towards science for science’s sake, commercial businesses have investors and must justify each decision with their bottom line. This means that funds won’t necessarily be directed as democratically as they would be with state run institutions. All this is purely academic, of course, if the state funds for space travel continue to be cut.

So, is it a good thing that we allow billionaires to be the first pioneers of the final frontier?

Private vs Public

The role of the government in space exploration is to execute missions that the market can’t support, but that the people agree are beneficial. When we send a spacecraft like New Horizons to take close-up pictures of Pluto we do so because, as people, we understand science’s role in satiating basic human curiosity. We understand that knowledge has value for its own sake and that often we can’t predict ahead of time how this knowledge might have practical applications in the future.

This kind of exploration is strictly the realm of public sector as there isn’t a way to make a guaranteed return on investment. Imagine how the Hubble Telescope would work if it was privately funded. A commercial entity would need a way to recoup the cost spent making the telescope, and so would likely start charging researchers to use it, and demand royalties for the use of information gained through the telescope’s findings.

This means that the more than 14,000 scientific papers and 1.3 million celestial discoveries resulting from the telescope would have been a lot harder to create.

Instead, the representatives of the American tax payer (politicians) decided that each citizen of the nation would pay $1.60 a year to put this giant telescope into space and operate it, so that researchers around the world could use it at no cost. Teachers can also use its images for their classrooms at no cost, and we can all marvel at the wonders of our universe. Also, an early warning system for any signs of approaching Thanos’ isn’t to be sneezed at…

So why don’t we just nationalise space?

Well, the trouble with relying on the public sector to make humanity an interplanetary species is that not everyone agrees space exploration is a good way to spend the federal budget. Trump’s most recent 2020 budget proposal cancels not one but three NASA science missions: the Wide-Field Infrared Survey (WFIRST) and two Earth science missions.

Though the new budget request does include $10.7 billion for NASA’s ‘exploration campaign’, these figures are never static, and are constantly subject to the whims of new administrations. NASA, the European Space Agency, and every national aerospace research agency, in fact, has experienced the frustration of almost completing a project only for it to be axed last minute.

Unlike public servants, however, billionaires are only beholden to the demands of the market, and to their own whims. This makes the private sector a far less stable but potentially more productive field. If Musk, Bezos, and Branson decide to funnel money into risky ventures, then the likelihood of their companies progressing quicker goes up. And this is exactly how things have played out.

The years 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2016 all saw a huge and costly explosions of SpaceX rockets. Further, Musk’s 2018 launch of a Falcon 9 rocket involved a spy satellite that detached and was destroyed. Were these failures to have occurred under a state funded institution, the calls to cut funds would have been deafening. But as a private organism, SpaceX can get up and dust itself off to try again the next day. Due to this persistence, the company has now successfully landed 16 rockets, with one 2017 Falcon 9 launch making it into space to deploy a satellite before successfully making the landing.

Like it or not, if anyone has the means to weather a money sink until cheaper, reusable rockets are viable for wide production, it’s these guys.

The right thing for the wrong reasons

Like most projects conducted by the 1%, however, it’s hard to ascertain what the true aim of the private space industry is. Whether benefit to the masses is the end goal or merely a by-product of success is a question that’s unlikely to be answered. If ultimately the aim of private industries is profit, how do we know that the profits made from the first wave of space tourists won’t just bottom out the industry, refusing to let costs atomize in lower markets for us plebeians?

The need for space travel isn’t mere frivolity, either. Many respected scientists, including the late Stephen Hawking, have continually repeated concerns that climate change and overpopulation will soon make earth an unsustainable habitat. Global warming is already causing rapid sea level rise, and it’s possible that if this progression isn’t diminished by a cut in emissions, a significant percentage of what is currently land will be under water.

In 2017 Hawking stated ‘we are running out of space and the only places to go to are other worlds. It is time to explore other solar systems. Spreading out may be the only thing that saves us from ourselves. I am convinced that humans need to leave Earth.’

If Hawking was right, it becomes increasingly important that the goal of affordable space travel is treated as a democratic issue by these private corporations that are, by definition, un-democratic.

Thankfully, it seems that at least Musk seems to grasp the gravity (ha) of the situation. Though his specific reasons for wanting to colonise other planets (specifically Mars) is slightly different – he fears for the future of the population in the event of another world war – the sentiment remains the same.

Musk said in 2018 that ‘if there’s a third world war we want to make sure there’s enough of a seed of human civilisation somewhere else to bring it back and shorten the length of the dark ages.’

Pretty dire stuff. However, if the entire population of Earth is at stake then acting in its best interests isn’t altruistic so much as a smart business move. And if there’s anything we can trust these billionaires to be, it’s smart.

Working together

Luckily, though they lie at opposite ends of the economic spectrum, public and private corporations have often been able to work in symbiosis with one another when it comes to developments in aerospace technology. As the public sector funds the risky and expensive learning process, lessons are learned so that private entities can afford to do similar things.

If NASA learns how to land a probe on a comet or asteroid, then the information learned doing so can then be provided to private corporations who have the vision of doing something similar for profit. If a government organisation learns how to land on an asteroid, extract a sample, and return it to earth, then private companies might be able to use that information to mine the asteroid for valuable resources.

And, yes, if a public space agency learns how to build reusable rockets, then billionaires could feasibly fund the creation of these rockets on mass. Luckily, the resulting profit and benefits to humanity are not mutually exclusive.

There are areas of space utilisation that would be best filled by the private sector and there are areas that are and will continue to be best fulfilled by the public sector. And, if the relationship remains symbiotic, and not parasitic, then I say let Bezos have his fun. I just hope he has space on his rocket for me if it all hits the fan ahead of schedule…

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