Remember the good ole' days when America's
national space program had sufficient political support to go to the Moon? Like
so many other good ole' days, those days are long dead and gone, and they will
not be revived by the next president. Not sure about this?
Well, a brief look at history clarifies the mystery, and one need only look at
back issues of this publication.
Space News has been running a series
titled "50 Years of Spaceflight."
Think back to 1969, the apex of the successful Apollo program. As space
historian Roger Launius explained in the Feb. 11, issue, "A 1969 Harris Poll found
that 64 percent of U.S. citizens polled thought NASA's then current $4 billion
annual budget was too much ..." ["Feb. 13, 1960: Task Group Charts NASA's
Future After Apollo," page 16]. Yes, there was the Vietnam War, political
turmoil, urban unrest and much civil angst and anger, but it was also the
Apollo program's shining year.
Yes, today we have different
concerns that aren't as immediately explosive and paralyzing as those of 1969,
but they are front and center in America's collective conscious. These include
Iraq, energy and resources, the environment and most notably the economy. I submit that
within this context, which will engage us for the foreseeable future, "Apollo redux + Mars" will not generate the consistent public, presidential and congressional support required for a
successful Constellation Program.
And then
there's Mars, a central focus of the recent workshop co-hosted by Stanford
University and The Planetary Society. The latter organization's executive director,
Louis Friedman, has said: "The next administration should make the human
spaceflight goal an international venture focused on Mars — both to bring in
more public support and to sustain the program politically."
Just
because many in the space community want to go to Mars doesn't mean such an
effort will generate public and political support, now or during the next few
years. This is clear if you read the space comments of the current presidential candidates, which can
be summarized as: "I love America. I love apple pie. NASA is as American as apple pie. Space exploration is important,
blah, blah, blah."
You can barely get them to talk in
detail about the Moon mission, let alone Mars. The candidates are driven by
their perception of what will get them elected, period. Once elected, our new
president will be driven by his/her perception of what will get him/her
re-elected. And guess what? Mars doesn't make the top 100 list of government
spending priorities, let alone the top 10.
It's simply
irrelevant how wonderful, scientifically valuable and briefly uplifting a visit to Mars would
be. End of story. Want Mars? You've got a better chance if you ask Warren
Buffet, Bill Gates and the rest of the world's billionaires to pay for it. And given
the right approach, perhaps they will. I understand Gates is looking for a new planet
where he can sell more copies of Windows Vista (sales on Earth aren't meeting
Wall Street expectations), and Buffet must be tired of traveling to that same Davos chalet.
The same
tired, old, pro-national space program arguments are trotted out over and over
again as the solution to weak public and political support, as if the arguments
just need to be made one more time to succeed. Unlike the real estate maxim "location,
location, location," it no longer works to repeatedly emphasize "exploration,
exploration, exploration." However, just like that
real estate maxim, as on Earth, so in space — and the Moon and asteroids are a
better location than Mars for developing a space economy now.
Want to get the public and
politicians demanding human space activity? Stop talking only about
exploration, and start talking about the economic development of the solar
system. Ask the presidential candidates to craft a
space policy to make that happen, rather than one designed to maintain jobs in
the traditional aerospace industry and important congressional districts.
As for a
true space economy, consider the following statement from John Marburger, the president's science advisor ["Marburger Confident Vision Survives for Long Term," May 24,
2004, page 3]: "There's a big contrast between
the president's vision for space exploration and space exploration —
particularly human space exploration — programs of the past. The paradigm for NASA exploration up
to now has been the Apollo program."
In 2004, during a meeting with reporters
in Washington, Marburger said the space exploration
vision laid out by Bush is not another urgent "flag-planting approach"
requiring the big spending spikes last seen during the Apollo years. Instead, it
is a sustained effort to reorient NASA
to expanding humanity's presence in the solar system.
"The
president has accepted the notion that eventually humans will incorporate accessible
space into their economic zone," Marburger said. "The
question is what would you have to do to make interplanetary space part of our
turf?" Pushing for Mars now ignores this.
Want the
Moon? Want Mars? Want the entire solar system? The history-without-mystery
lesson is: don't depend on sustained political support and government funding.
Instead, build an economically viable cis-lunar transportation
infrastructure that serves multiple markets both on and off Earth, and then you
will have economically sustainable (i.e. permanent) settlements
throughout the solar system. By now we should know that the best way to prevent
this is to rely on a president to give NASA a space
exploration mission with target dates that ignore the emerging capabilities of
the NewSpace industry.
Jeff Krukin is a
NewSpace business development consultant, creator of The Human-Space Connection®
concept, and a director of the Space Frontier
Foundation. He may be reached via his Web site, www.jeffkrukin.com.