I am very disappointed that no one pointed the single greatest advantage of space colonization: it dramatically reduces the chances of complete human extinction.
Humans are probably still long-term fucked in the case where the only living humans are away from Earth. We're kind of really not well suited to living other places at all.
Who says? There's no reason to suppose that a decent 2000-person colony on Mars wouldn't be able to survive post-earth.
Exactly.
And as far as the profitability of asteroid mining, Iridium currently costs 1,460 USD/ozt, as of the fourth of April 2019. This is after a relatively slight decline, with the general price of each troy ounce trending upwards since the earliest estimates of
my source site.
Asteroids can contain
tons of Iridium, and in more easily extractable and refinable configurations as well. Currently the metal is used for delicate scientific instruments due to it's insanely high melting temperature, but it's also notably dense, making it a very, very good radiation shield. And current production of Iridium is very, very low, since we currently can only get chance amounts of it while refining other metals. In other words, Iridium alone would turn an
egregious profit, speculated to be to the tune of
quadrillions of dollars on the upper end, and billions on the lower. Of course, the price will likely drop once the means of getting Iridium becomes more common, but the first company up there is going to make one fuck of a splash.
And notably, this is ignoring more mundane metals. Iron, Nickel, Gold, Platinum - metals are in very high numbers in asteroids and on other planets. I'd be willing to bet we could find some relatively sizable iridium deposits on the moon if we liked, along with Iron and whatever else we needed. The hard part is getting people there and keeping them there long enough without them getting cancer - something that will be much, much easier when we can just plate the tops of our habitats with Iridium, basically stopping
all the radiation. And that's just in it's raw form. With quantities to allow it, there's going to be alloys invented that could do any number of things. For all we know it's one of the key components of Adamantine, and we've just not figured it out because we haven't had enough to play with.
Getting a Lunar base up and running may or may not be neccesary; you could make an argument for a large-scale space habitat if you liked. But it won't hurt, and the only reason the 1%ers aren't slobbering to get it done now is because it won't look good next quarter, just next year, and you know how adverse they are to temporary losses.
I am very disappointed that no one pointed the single greatest advantage of space colonization: it dramatically reduces the chances of complete human extinction.
Jury's still out on whether that's an advantage or disadvantage.
It also likely includes animal extinction.
Depends on your perspective, and whether or not we live in a well-populated universe or no! If there's us and only a tiny, super-rarity of other intelligent beings (or, heaven forfend, we are alone) then really it doesn't matter, at all, what we do to our own planet and others we come across.
My personal belief, as silly as it might be odds-wise, is that we somehow managed to be the first one in our neighborhood to wake up. We're surrounded by life, but it's all pre-radio, at least to our sensors.
It's not the most likely scenario, but it's simple and I like it. Also I'm a colonialist bastard so having some natives to exploit EUIV style makes my E-peen hard.