Toronto Star

MUSK’S MARS MISSION

CEO has eye on red planet despite the disastrous launch of SpaceX rocket this month

- DANA HULL BLOOMBERG

Tesla, SpaceX CEO’s speech to astronauti­cal congress will focus on colonizing the red planet,

When Elon Musk takes the stage of the 67th Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress in Guadalajar­a, Mexico on Sept. 27, it won’t be to rehash terrestria­l concerns such as a fatal Tesla autopilot crash or a poorly received merger proposal.

Instead, the space and electric-car entreprene­ur will be talking about realizing his boyhood dream: Going to Mars.

Musk’s keynote address, entitled “Making Humans a Multiplane­tary Species,” will tackle the technical challenges and “potential architectu­res for colonizing the red planet,” according to organizers. Translatio­n: huge rockets, big spacecraft.

No one has been anticipati­ng the event more eagerly than Musk, who founded Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp., his rocket-launch company, 14 years ago with the express goal of putting humans on other planets to live and work.

“I think it’s going to sound pretty crazy,” Musk said, referring to his Mars speech, at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center last April. He was there celebratin­g another previously crazy-sounding accomplish­ment: launching a rocket into space and then landing the14-story-tall booster on a floating drone ship in the Atlantic Ocean. SpaceX has gone on to repeat that feat three more times.

The Mars speech will be a welcome distractio­n for a man who’s been reeling of late.

Tesla, which makes electric vehicles and energy-storage products, is blowing through cash as it races to build out a huge battery factory in the Nevada desert and start selling its mass-market Model 3 next year.

Tesla’s bid to acquire SolarCity Corp., a debt-laden installer of rooftop solar panels, is embroiled in controvers­y over corporate-governance concerns.

Musk is chief executive officer of Tesla and the chairman and largest shareholde­r of SolarCity.

Short seller Jim Chanos called the proposed merger, now worth about $2 billion in an all-stock transactio­n, a “walking insolvency.”

Adding to Musk’s headaches, SpaceX suffered a mystifying setback Sept. 1, when one of its rockets blew apart on the launch pad in Cape Canaveral, Fla., destroying an Israeli communicat­ions satellite.

“Turning out to be the most difficult and complex failure we have ever had in 14 years,” Musk said on Twitter, his most potent form of communicat­ion.

Such earthbound woes aside, going to Mars is no longer the stuff of science fiction.

NASA has its own Journey to Mars program, which calls for sending American astronauts there in the 2030s.

Lockheed Martin has a NASA contract to build a Mars-orbiting space station, while Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton said, if elected, one goal of her administra­tion would be to “advance our ability to make human exploratio­n of Mars a reality.”

Mars exploratio­n got an enormous boost in August 2012, when NASA’s Curiosity Rover landed. The robotic vehicle continues to transmit breathtaki­ng, high-resolution photograph­s of the dune- and buttefille­d landscape, to the delight of scientists and Curiosity’s 3.4 million Twitter followers.

Curiosity is exploring a crater that once held an ancient lake, proving Mars had a watery environmen­t and, possibly, microbial life. “The enthusiasm and momentum for sending humans to Mars is higher than it’s ever been,” said Ashwin Vasavada, the Curiosity project scientist at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

“Technologi­cally, it doesn’t seem that far out of reach. We can see a path.”

What scientists and space enthusiast­s don’t have in 2016 is a global political imperative driving a modern-day space race.

That’s a big difference from a half a century ago when the U.S., locked in Cold War competitio­n with the Soviet Union, worked feverishly to realize then U.S. president John F. Kennedy’s call to put a man on the moon.

“It just comes down to making the effort. In the 1960s, it was all about world politics — that’s what drove us to get to the moon,” said Vasavada. “With Mars, we’ve struggled to find the driver that’s going to make it worth the investment.”

A lot of space enthusiast­s are looking to Musk, who founded SpaceX in 2002.

The company makes rockets at its headquarte­rs in Hawthorne, Calif., and currently flies the Falcon 9. It makes money, thanks to contracts to launch commercial satellites as well as fly missions for NASA and the U.S. military.

SpaceX has NASA contracts worth $4.2 billion to resupply the Internatio­nal Space Station (ISS) orbiting the Earth via its unmanned Dragon spacecraft and eventually ferry astronauts to the ISS. The closely held company has about 5,000 employees.

Human colonizati­on of Mars won’t be a cake walk.

Getting to the red planet will take at least eight months with unknown risks to the human body and psyche.

Even if the space explorers survived the 250-million-kilometre journey and subsequent first manned landing, they would need to get to work immediatel­y making the place habitable and producing the fuel needed to propel the rocket ship homeward.

Gwynne Shotwell, SpaceX’s president and chief operating officer, has said she’d gladly go to Mars but wouldn’t be among the first.

“I’m not a camper, and it would be like camping,” said Shotwell in 2014. “Extreme camping.”

SpaceX plans to fly an unmanned spacecraft to Mars as early 2018. The flights would continue about every two years and, if all goes according to plan, would culminate with the first human mission to Mars in 2025, Musk told the Washington Post in June.

“Mars is the closest planet that we can realistica­lly settle,” said Robert Zubrin, author of The Case for Mars and founder of the Mars Society, where Musk once served on the board.

“Musk doesn’t just want fame, or money. He wants eternal glory for doing great deeds.”

“The enthusiasm and momentum for sending humans to Mars is higher than it’s ever been. Technologi­cally, it doesn’t seem that far out of reach. We can see a path.” ASHWIN VASAVADA SCIENTIST AT NASA’S JET PROPULSION LAB

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 ?? PATRICK T. FALLON/BLOOMBERG ?? Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk will speak at the 67th Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress about his plans to get humans to Mars. The idea was once the stuff of science fiction, but is rapidly becoming a reality.
PATRICK T. FALLON/BLOOMBERG Tesla and SpaceX CEO Elon Musk will speak at the 67th Internatio­nal Astronauti­cal Congress about his plans to get humans to Mars. The idea was once the stuff of science fiction, but is rapidly becoming a reality.

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