Beyond Fear of Near-Earth Objects: Mining Resources from Space?

Since Friday, with the fall of a meteor in Russia’s Urals, the close fly-by of Asteroid 2012 DA14, and reports of a meteorite sighted over Cuba, a renewed interest has been shown for near-earth objects (NEOs), notably because of the threat they may constitute to the earth and its inhabitants. Yet, NEOs are not only about dangers and Armageddon scenarios, they may also well be an opportunity.  Back at the end of 2008, thinking about the resource and energy issues humanity was facing, I was wondering which “grey swans,” to use Taleb’s terminology, we were overlooking. The possibility to use resources from space emerged as a major wild card, which could completely upset all our scenarios.

From dream to reality by 2025

space, space mining, asteroid, space, resource

This idea was actually not far-fetched and very serious people were working on it.

For example, in the US, the Center for Space Resource of the Colorado School of Mines Research Center, promoted the fascinating 8th Continent Project: Bringing Space down to Earth. This Center is also part of the Space Resources Roundtable, (see their steering committee for other institutions and companies). At the University of Arizona’s Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, John S. Lewis, professor of planetary science published back in 1997 Mining the Sky: Untold Riches from the Asteroids, Comets, and Planets. It was and is a topic important enough to belong to the education resources of the NASA, e.g. Lesson 17. Asteroid Resources: The Stepping Stone to Beyond. The Keck Institute for Space Studies (KISS) at Caltech started working in September 2011 on an Asteroid Retrieval Feasibility Study (pdf), published in April 2012, “to investigate the feasibility of identifying, robotically capturing, and returning an entire Near-Earth Asteroid (NEA) to the vicinity of the Earth by the middle of the next decade, i.e. 2025.”

What could have been seen as part of a far away science fiction’s future has become very real with the launch of Planetary Resources Inc. in April 2012. A quick look at the founders, advisors and investors shows the seriousness of the venture, grounded in science, imagination, power and wealth, which also facilitates media coverage and access to future needed capital (see, for example, for an April 2012 round-up Is Planetary Resources Using a NASA Report As a Business Plan? by Keith Cowing, NasaWatch.com). The  NASA awarded a contract to US firms to study the feasibility of asteroid’s mining (Andrew Duffy, “NASA awards asteroid mining contract,” 28 September, 2012 , Australian Mining). More recently, on 23 January 2013, Deep Space Industries unveiled its creation, plans and needs (see, for example, related articles in The Guardian or in Popular Mechanics).

Meanwhile, as Planetary Resources emphasizes, using the Urals’ Meteor and Asteroid 2012 DA14 events, the new capabilities that are being developed to mine asteroids can also help in preventing the threat aspect of NEOs. The latter were notably discussed during the meeting of the Action Team-14, part of the 50th session of the Scientific and Technical Subcommittee of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), which is serendipitously held from February 11 to 22 (Leonard David, space.com).

What would entail such a future, where resources also come from space?

It is most than likely that everything we know would be fundamentally reshaped, to start with our worldview, our Weltanschaung. With the Copernican revolution, human beings inhabiting the Western world, or rather, then the Christian world, stopped seeing themselves as the center of the universe, while the Church started seeing its demise from its central role, science developed and the modern world was being born. What could be the consequences in terms of worldview if we could now travel into space, push further the boundaries, and furthermore exchange with other spatial bodies, without being so afraid? How would the paradigm shift we are most probably living through be impacted?

Asteroid, mining, space, resource

Would we only exploit, not taking stock of the lessons we learned on earth? Would we thus go towards an even more selfish world fraught with hubris and even bitterer struggles and wars? A world where the human technological feat thus realized would bring us back towards an even more human centric system, somehow closer to the pre-modern era than to the modern one? On the contrary, would travels and long sojourn outside Earth bring us more humility, more awareness of our dependency upon the rest, of our belonging to a whole, because the Earth and its inhabitants are so infinitely small and fragile? The generalization of images of the Earth from outside its atmosphere, or even of the fact that the Earth may not be seen from other location in space, could have a very profound effect, as it would affect consciousness and imagination (as Benedict Anderson shows in Imagined Communities).

This novel type of resources, as those coming from deep-sea mining, and their multifaceted impacts should be integrated in all our judgments on the future. But is it truly the case? To take only two famous examples, the US National Intelligence Council Global Trends 2030, although dealing with resources scarcity, only considers space from the point of view of extended warfare and asteroids as the cause of possible natural catastrophe.  On the contrary, The UK MoD, Global Strategic Trends Out to 2040 (Feb 2010), not only always integrates space as a domain and an operational field, but also underlines the importance and likely rising relevance of the “exploitation of extreme environments”, including “space; the Polar regions; the deep ocean; and deep underground regions” (pp. 115-116, p.145), in the framework of resources supply (or scarcity). Unfortunately the multidimensional impact of these exploitations is not fully developed, despite two pages devoted to space (pp.152-153).

More efforts to better consider space, including resources, are necessary. In the meanwhile, we shall monitor the issue with one of our daily scans, the Space Resources Sigils.

The Space Resources Sigils

ASTEROID, MINING, SPACE, RESOURCES, scarcityThe Space Resources Sigils is part of The Sigils, a series of daily papers scanning the horizon for weak signals related to various issues relevant to the security of societies, polities, nations and citizens. They use Paper.Li as curation platform.

An opening post on the importance of space resources as their use should be a reality in the relatively near future (middle of next decade, i.e. 2025) can be found here.

The Space Resources Sigils can be read below or by clicking on the title to access the Paper.li platform (best for mobiles and tablets).


Portal to Extreme Environments Security

extreme environment 250In its Global Strategic Trends – Out to 2040, the UK Ministry of Defence, Development, Concepts and Doctrine Centre (DCDC), underlined that “resource and the environment” was one of the major dimensions shaping the future. Notably, the highly likely growing resource scarcity would lead to strengthened interest in what they call “Extreme Environments” and in their exploitation.

“The search for alternative sources of energy, minerals, food and water, enabled by the assured transfer and access to information, will become more urgent. Consequently the exploration of extreme environments such as: space; the Polar regions; the deep ocean; and deep underground regions is likely to increase.” p.115 Global Strategic Trends – Out to 2040

Here we shall thus progressively explore the future security components of those extreme environments, understand what they entail, how they could interact with and modify other issues and the futures we foresee. Each issue will be organised through an analytical sub-section and a scanning and monitoring one, with a specific Sigils.

Deep-sea resources security

Space resources

Arctic region

Antarctica

Deep underground

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The picture was made out of the following images:

  • An asteroid mining mission to an Earth-approaching asteroid by Denise Watt, NASA, public domain via Wikimedia Commons.
  • Earth seafloor crust age 1996 by NOAA, http://www.ngdc.noaa.gov, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons.
  • Nuclear icebreaker “Yamal” on its way to the North Pole By Wofratz (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.5)], via Wikimedia Commons.
  • Map of Antarctica from en:Image:Antarctica.jpg - Political map and research stations (2002) – CIA – Public domain.
  • Blender3D_EarthQuarterCut.jpg by SoylentGreen, Earth-Texture is from NASA) [GFDL (http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html) or CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/)], via Wikimedia Commons.

 

2012 EVT – New Government, New Opposition, Last Hope (Panglossy)

Last weeks’ summary: In 2012 EVT, Everstate (the ideal-type corresponding to our very real countries created to foresee the future of governance and of the modern nation-state) knows a rising dissatisfaction of its population. Alarmed by the rising difficulties and widespread discontent, the governing authorities decide to do something when new elections start. Dependent upon programmes created to face efficiently past challenges, prisoners of entrenched political groupings, comforted in their vision by the BRICS’ success and renewed optimism, the major parties campaign to come back to the order ante. As a result, habits and the existing system, once the new national representatives are elected and the new government starts ruling, are even more entrenched, almost ossified.

(The reader can click on each picture to see a larger version in a new tab - navigating map of posts is available to ease reading).

Yet, something unexpected, dismissed or rather minimised by observers, is also happening during the months leading to the election: the rise of small and sometimes polarised parties, accompanied by an increase in the political mobilisation outside currently eligible parties. In this, Everstate is just exemplifying what is happening all over the Western world.

For example, in May 2012, in Germany in North Rhine-Westphalia, the new Pirate Party again fares very well. In France, the results of the first round of the Presidential elections shows a strong rise of parties on the extreme left and right of the political spectrum. In Greece, thirty-two parties compete during the first May elections, and seven, including those positioned at the extreme, win seats in Parliament. Meanwhile, the Occupy and Democracia Real Ya! – also known as Indignados – movements, born out of Spain’s mobilisation a year before, show their continuing presence, with various protests staged on May Day, then between 12 and 15 May, with varying participation rates. Signs of polarisation can also be found here. #Anonymous, in general, backs those movements from and in the virtual world, besides other operations, and represent a political force and not a criminal activity as some would like to interpret it.

Indeed free association, free speech and free assembly, enhanced by the new technological means of communication and mobilization, added to the general dissatisfaction while security is still being sought, create new extra-parliamentary organisations and mobilizations because the programmes of the classical parties and existing parliamentary groupings do not answer anymore the needs of the citizens and of the nations. The fluidity of the situation, the diversity of the types of organisations and the various stages of polarisation are symptoms of systems trying to evolve and redesign themselves, of the need for radically new programmes, which are in the making, as the underlying socio-political model are outmoded and do not offer any easy efficient solution.

As far as Occupy Everstate is concerned, they have to face some very difficult issues. What gave them their strength and made them truly representative, notably in terms of concerns and identification of crucial issues for the overall security of the nation, their faith in a fully democratic process, also constitutes an impediment as it slows and even sometimes block their decision process. Their main means of action, peaceful protests and sit-ins, so far has not allowed seeing their demands satisfied. Their successes are however far from negligible as they are now part of the political landscape, and are thus heard, when one year ago they were systematically ignored, and as they have succeeded in raising awareness to the plight of the many. Yet, the old ideas and habits they fight are as pregnant, powerful and ruling as ever.

Some groups within the movement are getting tired of obtaining nothing, of seeing the status quo continuing, while they start meeting difficulties to mobilise people. They are following the American debate existing over the “diversity of tactics.” Should they move away from the essential original non-violence – including the respect of laws and of property – of the movements to the “diversity of tactics” which includes also “property damage and armed retaliation against the police” but NOT “extremist tactics such as planting bombs and armed insurrection? (Bramhall, March 2012). True to the democratic foundation of the movement, the general answer is to convene a General Assembly to vote. However, lengthy debates have now been going on for days and nothing is solved. Furthermore the example of the Pirate Party also tempts Occupy Everstate. Should they register formally? This would allow them, maybe, entering parliament and developing their programme, and more important, getting things done (for the leadership and organisation debate going on in Spain, see Tremlett, May 2012). Yet, would they not also loose part of their soul, of their raison d’être? The tension is growing within the movement, while some actions abiding to the “diversity of tactics” start, still very rare, but yet, they happen.

The result of the new elections seems to freeze the contractions that agitate Occupy Everstate. Could this new government, maybe, bring Everstate back to where it was before life became so hard, before unfairness became unbearable, before the only way forward seemed to go to the streets to be heard or even worse? Nobody wants to sleep in the street, to be poor, to be condemned to unemployment, and even less to fight and risk one’s life. This hope, this last hope, isn’t it worth giving it a chance?

To be continued

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References

Stuart Jeanne Bramhall in “Debating Violence in the Occupy Movement,” Take The Square, 3 March 2012.

Giles Tremlett, “Spain’s indignado protesters face anniversary crackdown,” Guardian.co.uk, 11 May 2012.

Images

Official logo of the Swedish Pirate Party (Piratpartiet) by Piratpartiet [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons.

The OccupyCal General Assembly approves of… something. November 15 2011 by Daniel Parks from Berkeley, United States (Fingers Up) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons. This image was originally posted to Flickr by D.H. Parks at http://flickr.com/photos/8073513@N03/6349212141. It was reviewed on 21 November 2011 by the FlickreviewR robot and confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.