Houston Chronicle

SpaceX leader outlines plan to colonize Mars

- By Samantha Masunaga LOS ANGELES TIMES

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk on Tuesday unveiled his plans for colonizing Mars, which could eventually involve a fleet of up to 1,000 spaceships to transport as many as 1 million people to the Red Planet.

Musk envisions continuous launches from Earth, with massive rockets returning for reuse and spacecraft refueling in a “parking” orbit around Earth. The spacecraft, carrying as many as 100 people, would fly on their own to Mars. They would return using a combinatio­n methane and liquid oxygen fuel mined from Mars.

Speaking to the Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress in Guadalajar­a, Mexico, Musk said he hoped to reduce the per person cost of getting to Mars from $10 billion, the price using “traditiona­l methods,” to close to $200,000.

The cost for SpaceX to develop the interplane­tary transport system could be $10 billion. The entire project would cost much more and would probably require a public-private partnershi­p, Musk said.

Musk said the Los Angeles-area company is spending less than 5 percent of its resources on the Mars system. But in a year and a half to two years, Musk said, most of SpaceX could be working on the project, and the company could spend $300 million a year on it.

In a tweet before the speech, which was titled “Making Humans a Multiplane­tary Species,” Musk said the rocket booster for his interplane­tary transport system will measure about 39 feet in diameter, and the spaceship will be about 55 feet in diameter.

When the two are stacked on top of each other, the total height will be about 400 feet. That is taller than the Saturn V rocket that carried the Apollo astronauts to the moon in the 1970s, and the SpaceX rocket would have nearly four times as much thrust.

Musk has said a crewed mission to Mars could launch in 2024 with arrival on Martian soil in 2025. But on Tuesday, he said that if things go well, the time frame could be more on the order of 10 years.

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