NASA is abandoning the International Space Station and making room for private companies to develop a new economy in orbit above Earth, and asteroid mining could be the key to the whole project.
There’s been a lot of talk recently about reusable rockets making space travel cheaper, but it still costs a couple thousand dollars for every pound of cargo launched into orbit.
That’s where asteroid mining comes in.
NASA says the mineral wealth in the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter equals about $100 billion for every person on Earth, but the real benefit of these space rocks is the ice they possess.
Ice found on passing asteroids can be converted into fuel to power spacecraft already in orbit, decreasing the amount of propellant they need to carry during liftoff and reducing the overall cost of space travel, according to NASA.
“It seems likely that in the next century when we begin to colonize the inner solar system, the metals and minerals found on asteroids will provide the raw materials for space structures and comets will become the watering holes and gas stations for interplanetary spacecraft.”
Deep Space Industries is busy building the world’s first interplanetary prospecting spacecraft to demonstrate the technology necessary to extract water, in the form of ice, and other resources from passing asteroids.
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