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View Full Version : NASA is now accepting applications from companies that want to mine the moon



Skywizard
10th February 2014, 02:55
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/resources/lunar_orbiter/images/moon.jpg

NASA is now working with private companies to take the first steps in exploring the moon for valuable resources like helium 3 and rare earth metals.

Initial proposals are due tomorrow for the Lunar Cargo Transportation and Landing by Soft Touchdown program (CATALYST). One or more private companies will win a contract to build prospecting robots, the first step toward mining the moon.

The contract will be a "no funds exchanged" Space Agreement Act, which means the government will not be directly funding the effort, but will receive NASA support. Final proposals are due on March 17th, 2014. NASA has not said when it will announce the winner.

NASA works with private companies that service the International Space Station, and those partnerships have gone well. Faced with a skeleton budget, the agency is looking for innovative ways to cooperate with the private sector in order to continue research and exploration, as it did recently with a crowdsourcing campaign to improve its asteroid-finding algorithms. That campaign was launched with another private company, Planetary Resources, the billionaire-backed asteroid mining company.

FACED WITH A SKELETON BUDGET, THE AGENCY IS LOOKING FOR INNOVATIVE WAYS TO COOPERATE WITH THE PRIVATE SECTOR

According to the 1967 Outer Space Treaty of the United Nations, countries are prohibited from laying claim to the moon. The possibility of lunar mining and the emergence of private space companies has triggered a debate over lunar property rights, however.

"There’s a strong case for developing international law in this area because in 1967 it was not envisaged that anyone other than nation states would be able to explore the moon," Ian Crawford, a planetary science professor, told The Telegraph. "Clearly that is changing now and there is a case for developing the outer space treaty to include private organisations that may wish to explout the moon."


Source: http://www.theverge.com/2014/2/9/5395684/nasa-begins-hunt-for-private-companies-to-mine-the-moon-catalyst


peace...
skywizard

Tesseract
10th February 2014, 03:01
Could be a new high for acronym desperation.

Carmody
10th February 2014, 04:38
I know!

I have an idea!

Let's take our psychosis off planet!

Why use it just here, when we can go to all kinds of other places with it?

Why come to realization of self, when the ego can just hang on... and go play with itself in another corner, a more convoluted sandbox?

Limor Wolf
10th February 2014, 05:56
I know!

I have an idea!

Let's take our psychosis off planet!

Why use it just here, when we can go to all kinds of other places with it?

Why come to realization of self, when the ego can just hang on... and go play with itself in another corner, a more convoluted sandbox?

My thoughts as well. This was possibly already checked upon by the secret space program, but now it has to be made publicly. The use of the moon for human purposes is done for quite a while now. Another familiar attempt to take control on a foreign land. Of course it might look different when considering the less human aspect, we can allow ourself to grow out of only this limited perspective by now.

The moon is a good real estate market for years now, in the seventies an American billionaire named Dennis Hope registered the moon and all the planets in the solar system besides Earth under his name. Others have done so as well. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world have already purchased their plots on the moon, even the Israeli air force is the proud owner of 500 acres. So marketing of moon land is not a new issue, the use of the moon as a source for rare metals and other valuable resources is perheps defind by NASA as a continuation of 'research and exploration', but it is apparently no less than one of those take overs and a use of the more abundant commodities of earth (no fear of shortage here) - The human ego.

Any thoughts on why we are allowed to do it?

Selene
10th February 2014, 16:43
Materials on the Moon's surface contain helium-3 at concentrations on the order of between 1.4 and 15 ppb in sunlit areas,[42][43] and may contain concentrations as much as 50 ppb in permanently shadowed regions. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3

Hmmm. So using robots to mine helium-3, an ostensibly valuable isotope on the dark side of the moon would provide the perfect cover story for our presence there. For what?

I think it’s instructive that Ingo Swann, the superpsychic who ‘invented’ military remote viewing, wrote in his memoirs Penetration (download PDF here: http://projectavalon.net/Ingo_Swann_-_Penetration_-_The_Question_of_Extraterrestrial_and_Human_Telepathy.pdf ) that his first major RV hit for the military involved seeing a huge existing mining operation on the dark side of the moon. This operation was being run by ‘not’ earth humans...

Swann’s account fits into other reports of ‘others’ already inhabiting the moon, the halted NASA moon-landing programs, etc.

China recently sent a robotic camera to the moon for no apparent reason.

Whassup, indeed.

Cheers,

Selene

Blacklight43
10th February 2014, 18:36
I wonder if the current occupants might have something to say about poachers from afar stealing their resources!?!

pyriel
11th February 2014, 07:24
Mining on the moon. That idea kind of reminds me of the movie, "the time machine" where the is mostly destroyed.. Here are 2 clips. 1st one is alittle over 3 mins and says what happened. The 2nd one is the 1st scene of the moon in the city and the other part when he is many thousands of years into the future.

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