Science
Related: About this forumMoon mining gains momentum as private companies plan for a lunar economy
By Leonard David published about 6 hours ago
"This is now becoming so real."
NASA has awarded funds to Austin, Texas-based ICON, to develop construction technologies that could help build landing pads, habitats, and roads on the Moon using local lunar resources. (Image credit: ICON/BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group)
GOLDEN, Colorado The pace is quickening for using Earth's moon as a near-term, go-to location to land on, live and explore.
As NASA's Artemis Program moves forward, so too do long-term plans by small and large firms, academia, along with international space agencies.
That was in evidence at the twenty-third meeting of the Space Resources Roundtable, held here last month at the Colorado School of Mines. A record attendance of some 250 participants spoke on lunar economic models, results of in-the-lab tests, and legal and policy issues. A number of entrepreneurial groups shared their strategies to turn the moon into a hustle and bustle world of marketable services.
Off-world machinery
"For years it has all seemed like pie in the sky
do this, or do that. This is now becoming so real," said Angel Abbud-Madrid, director of the Center for Space Resources at the Colorado School of Mines.
More:
https://www.space.com/moon-mining-gains-momentum?utm_source=notification
Since no one has objected, dibs on the universe!
elleng
(136,111 posts)PlutosHeart
(1,445 posts)cannot quite screwing up things can they?
RandySF
(70,652 posts)Chainfire
(17,757 posts)Who better to trust the future of the moon to than mining interests...
"A number of entrepreneurial groups shared their strategies to turn the moon into a hustle and bustle world of marketable services."
And I wonder just what is this going to cost me?