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posted by martyb on Sunday December 08 2019, @11:09PM   Printer-friendly

Luxembourg expands its space resources vision

Étienne Schneider, deputy prime minister of Luxembourg, frequently tells the story of how he got interested in building a space resources industry in the country. His efforts to diversify the country's economy several years ago led to a meeting with Pete Worden, at the time the director of NASA's Ames Research Center and a proponent of many far-reaching space concepts. During an Oct. 22 panel discussion at the International Astronautical Congress (IAC) in Washington, he recalled Worden advocating for commercial space: "Why shouldn't you go for space mining activities?"

"When he explained all this to me, I thought two things," Schneider said. "First of all, what did the guy smoke before coming into the office? And second, how do I get him out of here?"

He eventually bought into Worden's vision, starting a space resources initiative that attracted companies to the country while enacting a space resources law like that in the United States. By the beginning of 2019, though, it looked like it might all be a bad trip. The two major startups in that industry, Deep Space Industries and Planetary Resources, had been acquired by other companies with no interest in space resources. Worse, the Planetary Resources deal wiped out an investment of 12 million euros Luxembourg made in the startup.

Schneider is undaunted by those setbacks as he continues work to make Luxembourg a hotbed of entrepreneurial space, a scope that has expanded beyond, but has not abandoned, space resources. During the IAC, the country's year-old space agency signed an agreement with NASA to explore potential cooperation, building on an agreement Luxembourg signed with the U.S. Commerce Department in May. Just before the conference, Luxembourg announced it would partner with the European Space Agency on a space resources center in the country.

The article includes an interview with Schneider.

Previously: Luxembourg Announces Investment in Asteroid Mining

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  • (Score: 2) by Immerman on Monday December 09 2019, @05:38PM

    by Immerman (3985) on Monday December 09 2019, @05:38PM (#930132)

    >If you can manufacture very high value items in space ($$$$$$$/kg) and then send them down easily without countries thinking you're trying to attack them, then that makes sense.
    Early on it will likely be raw materials. 16 Psyche (The largest metallic asteroid at about 225km across) probably contains about 8,500x more rare metals than the total amount of gold mined throughout history. Along with about 12 billion times as much iron as is mined every year on Earth.

    >What space vehicle do we have that can bring a few tons of lower value stuff down intact at a low enough cost to be competitive?

    We don't need a vehicle to things down to Earth, at least not for sufficiently durable goods like metals. Just cast the metal into a good "reentry capsule" shape, coat it with some ablative heat shielding (even flour paste can be surprisingly effective), and maybe give it a parachute to provide some guidance and soften the final impact.

    If you're doing that really regularly, it *might* make sense to build "reentry sleds" that would give you better control, and then carry them back into orbit. Or perhaps a nice orbital "rail gun" capable of accelerating material in low orbit to a complete stop,so that it can fall the hundred or so miles to the surface with only a parachute.

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