Lupa Kata Sandi? Klik di Sini

atau Masuk melalui

Belum Memiliki Akun Daftar di Sini


atau Daftar melalui

Sudah Memiliki Akun Masuk di Sini

Konfirmasi Email

Kami telah mengirimkan link aktivasi melalui email ke rudihamdani@gmail.com.

Klik link aktivasi dan dapatkan akses membaca 2 artikel gratis non Laput di koran dan Majalah Tempo

Jika Anda tidak menerima email,
Kirimkan Lagi Sekarang

Why Space is the Next Frontier in Mining

24 September 2023 20:02 WIB

By: Alex Gilbert, a fellow at the Payne Institute for Public Policy at the Colorado School of Mines in Golden, Colorado and is a PhD student in its Space Resources program.

Private companies and governments are reaching for the stars in an effort to ease Earth-bound shortages.

In August, India made history by conducting the first soft landing near the south pole of the Moon. This low-cost mission —  its budget was well under USD$100 million —  heralds a new era of space exploration and deep space commerce. 

Among other objectives, the mission confirmed the presence of water in lunar regolith, the local dirt. The findings, building on recent scientific discoveries,  underscore an emerging paradigm. 

A global resource rush is starting to find and extract the first accessible natural resource in outer space: lunar water.

This resource rush, enabled by space-sector innovations, has led to many new players in the space energy sector, with solar power a leading option for development. Emerging economies like India and the United Arab Emirates are joining existing space powers and dozens of private commercial firms in this race. 

The United States and China are developing competing international collaborations to access these resources: the Artemis Accords and International Lunar Research Station respectively. Access to and development of space resources can bring significant economic benefits to Earth.

Space resources are now feasible because technological innovation has made lunar missions cheaper, from single digit billions to double digit millions, with promises for further cost reduction. 

Falling launch costs, particularly due to reusable rocketry and commercial innovation, are one of the two economic factors accelerating the commercialisation of space and the lunar resource rush.    

The other is the decreasing costs of spacecraft design, enabled by the digital revolution.

Two American companies, SpaceX and Blue Origin, are developing super heavy lift launch vehicles that can put 75-100 tonnes into low-Earth orbit. Many other reusable vehicles are in the pipeline globally.

There are two primary space resource types — lunar volatiles, which include water, and regolith — to provide local and export materials.

Water is cheap on Earth but costs USD$10,000 or more for each kilogram delivered to space. Water is the oil of outer space, making the Moon the Saudi Arabia of the solar system. Although dry by Earth standards, the lunar south pole contains significant water deposits. 

The Moon has lower gravity, so it is easier to extract and transport this water to orbital locations than send it from Earth. Water’s two components, hydrogen and oxygen, can be split to produce rocket fuel.

Existing satellites contribute hundreds of billions in telecommunications and other services for global economies. But they are not refuelled. This limits their life and number of useful missions. 

Spacecraft fuel produced from lunar water can supercharge the orbital economy, support defence activities in Earth orbit, and even lay the foundation for human exploration of the Moon and Mars.

Beyond water, the regolith on the Moon, Mars and asteroids contains useful materials to build habitats, bases and mines on planetary surfaces. They can provide food, water, air and other goods for future astronauts. 

NASA’s recent MOXIE experiment on the Perseverance rover produced oxygen from Mars’ carbon dioxide atmosphere, the first demonstration of space resources production. 

Mass is a primary economic barrier to expanded space activities. By allowing future explorers to ‘live off the land’, space resources could provide mass multipliers that enable lunar and Martian settlement.

Regolith can also produce useful metals and other goods to return to Earth. The clean-energy transition on Earth is metal-hungry for bulk metals like nickel and cobalt and more exotic metals like rare earths. 

Prices are soaring while new mines bring environmental and social consequences. Exotic sources like deep sea mining or asteroid mining are being considered. 

Some asteroids, and even parts of the Moon, contain especially high concentrations of the elements that could support terrestrial economies. 

Recent missions such as by Japan’s Hayabusa spacecraft, brought back asteroid materials to Earth but only in small amounts. NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is expected to bring more than a hundred grams of samples from the asteroid Bennu. 

Advanced technologies in the 2030s and 2040s could increase payloads to kilograms or even tonnes, potentially justifying high costs of extraction.

There are three primary elements that shape the environmental sustainability of space mining. These consequences must be better understood to ensure space mining benefits rather than harms the global environment.

First, launching hundreds or even thousands of rockets to kickstart a space economy would have a significant effect on the atmosphere. Pollution from high-altitude rocket burns is poorly understood and previous studies suggest potential impacts on climate and the ozone layer. 

Similarly, returning materials to Earth requires atmospheric re-entry, which can cause high nitrous oxide formation and potentially affect the climate.

Second, sending metals back to Earth could greatly reduce the environmental impact of terrestrial extractive industries. Current metal mining on the planet is tremendously disruptive, threatening local land, air and water quality, as well as communities. 

The few alternatives, like deep-sea mining, threaten biodiversity damage, engendering political opposition. Producing platinum, cobalt, nickel or rare earths in space could limit damage to the biosphere.

Third, and poorly understood, space mining can affect the space environment. 

While that environment is already deadly from radiation, microgravity, extreme temperatures and other factors, it is also extraordinarily fragile. 

Landing a spacecraft on the Moon shoots out a dust cloud that can damage other spacecraft and pose a threat to astronaut health. 

The study of lunar, Martian and asteroid sustainability has barely begun, but requires development to ensure long-term productive use of our collective space resources.

Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™.

*) DISCLAIMER

Articles published in the “Your Views & Stories” section of en. tempo.co website are personal opinions written by third parties, and cannot be related or attributed to en.tempo.co’s official stance.



Gold Mine Blasting Scares Red Island Tourists in Indonesia's Banyuwangi, Local Govt Responds

1 hari lalu

Gold Mine Blasting Scares Red Island Tourists in Indonesia's Banyuwangi, Local Govt Responds

The Tujuh Bukit Gold Mine stands on 4,998 hectares of land in a production forest area. BSI has utilized 992 hectares of the area for mining operation


Chinese National Detained Over Illegal Gold Mining Activities in Kalimantan

4 hari lalu

Chinese National Detained Over Illegal Gold Mining Activities in Kalimantan

EMR Minister and the National Police arrested a Chinese national with the initials YH for allegedly mining gold ore illegally in West Kalimantan.


Celios: Mining License for Religious Organizations Poses Economic, Environmental Risks

4 hari lalu

Celios: Mining License for Religious Organizations Poses Economic, Environmental Risks

Center of Economic & Law Studies (Celios) says several economic & environmental impacts would result from religious organizations' mining management.


Boeing Starliner Capsule's First Crewed Test Flight Postponed over Atlas Rocket Glitch

9 hari lalu

Boeing Starliner Capsule's First Crewed Test Flight Postponed over Atlas Rocket Glitch

The long-awaited first crewed test flight of Boeing's (BA.N) Starliner spacecraft will be no earlier than Friday, NASA says.


Economist Slams Jokowi on Mining Permits for Foreign Investors; Warns of Separatist Movement Possibility

11 hari lalu

Economist Slams Jokowi on Mining Permits for Foreign Investors; Warns of Separatist Movement Possibility

Faisal Basri slammed President Joko Widodo or Jokowi's regime for granting mining permits to foreign investors.


Boeing Sending First Astronaut Crew to Space after Years of Delay

13 hari lalu

Boeing Sending First Astronaut Crew to Space after Years of Delay

Boeing is poised to send the first Starliner space capsule with a crew of humans into orbit next week.


Legal Populism in the Tin Case

15 hari lalu

Legal Populism in the Tin Case

The Attorney General's Office needs to focus on the main perpetrators of corruption in tin trading in Bangka Belitung. Avoid legal populism.


Tin Vanishes, Humans and Nature Perish

20 hari lalu

Tin Vanishes, Humans and Nature Perish

The mining of tin causes serious environmental damage in Bangka Belitung. The number of children with intellectual disabilities and autism is rising.


Legal Tinkering to Pay Political Debt

28 hari lalu

Legal Tinkering to Pay Political Debt

President Jokowi is planning to grant mining concessions to mass organizations. Paying political debts.


Minister Bahlil Lahadalia on Revocation of Mining Permits and Alleged Extortion

41 hari lalu

Minister Bahlil Lahadalia on Revocation of Mining Permits and Alleged Extortion

Bahlil Lahadalia explains the uproar over the revocation of mining permits.