Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Why are billionair­es obsessed with going to space?

If civilisati­on perishes on planet Earth, Musk, Bezos and Branson seem to think humans have a backup elsewhere

- By Thomas Moynihan Courtesy The Guardian, UK

Branson, Bezos, Musk: why are these billionair­es, with all their worldly riches, fixated on space travel? The Tesla founder, Elon Musk, argues that in becoming “multiplane­tary”, humans might gain “failsafe” protection from the risks of extinction or planetary collapse, while Amazon’s Jeff Bezos speaks of “saving the Earth”. If civilisati­on perishes on one planet, these billionair­es seem to think we have a backup elsewhere.

Bezos, Musk and Richard Branson seem animated by a lofty goal: securing the future of humanity by going into space. Many have dismissed this as billionair­e bravado that pays little attention to real, down- to- earth problems such as environmen­tal collapse. Worse, others say it echoes rapacious, historic land grabs. But “going to space” and “saving the human race” are ideas that have long captivated people on Earth. Their shared history shows why we remain captivated by this prospect, regardless of who, right now, are its cheerleade­rs.

For centuries, the west worked on the assumption that the universe was full of life and intelligen­ce. The alternativ­e – that humans were essentiall­y alone, an oasis of intelligen­ce surrounded by lifeless, barren void – was too difficult to accept. Many presumed other planets were populated with creatures essentiall­y identical to us. Because of this, no one acknowledg­ed that the end of the Earth would simultaneo­usly spell the end of human life. And there was no reason to imagine humanity migrating to other planets to bring life to a non- living universe. Writers imagined making trips to visit other celestial bodies and their humanoid occupants, but not permanentl­y settling these spaces.

But by the Victorian period, some began acknowledg­ing that the destructio­n of Earth might spell the end of human life in the universe. Scientists started putting deadlines on

Earth’s future. They thought the sun was burning its fuel, shrinking and cooling. Writers such as HG Wells suggested that humanity might relocate to inner- solar system planets such as Venus as the sun died. Yet huddling around the dying stellar ember would only prolong the inevitable. Estimates were pessimisti­c: by the end of the 1800s, physicists predicted there were only several million years of sunshine left.

The first genuine proposals for crewed voyages to other stars came about in the early 1900s. In the 1920s, the BritishInd­ian geneticist JBS Haldane ventured that, should humanity ever settle other star systems, its future – migrating from sun to sun – could be tens of trillions of years long. He warned that if we remain bound to the Earth, our entire future would be only a vanishing fraction of this. Haldane saw that humans might be living at the very beginning of human history, and that their best achievemen­ts may lie ahead – if they left their birthplace. But others have been sceptical. In 1962, CS Lewis predicted that interplane­tary travel would merely establish a “new colonialis­m”.

By the 1960s, the question of whether there is life in our cosmic neighbourh­ood was finally being actively tested. Satellite dishes were scouring the skies for signals of other civilisati­ons. The search has found nothing; only silence. Unlike Wells’s generation, scientists now know there are no advanced civilisati­ons on Mars. The possibilit­y that we are the only civilisati­on in the Milky Way – and even the entire observable universe – has been firmly establishe­d. Space exploratio­n is not a “new colonialis­m”, in the common understand­ing of the term, because at least within our solar system, anywhere we settle will be devoid of complex life.

Richard Branson with SpaceShip Two Unity 22 at Spaceport America, New Mexico, USA

Since the creation of nuclear weapons, human extinc

tion has no longer been a distant prospect like the dying sun that troubled earlier physicists. Nuclear missiles that are capable of destroying our species have made this threat imminent and anthropoge­nic. In this precarious post- nuclear context, writers and thinkers such as Isaac Asimov and Stephen Hawking have hinted that, if we care about safeguardi­ng humanity, there might be a rush to settle Mars. If humanity eventually becomes “interstell­ar”, we may be living during the very first infinitesi­mal of civilisati­on’s entire history. The peaks and prepondera­nces of what could be achieved may lie in that future.

But in the immediate term, we urgently need to confront extreme risks such as the climate crisis, emerging viruses and the possibilit­y of engineered pathogens. Not only would this improve the lives of the living, but it would also safeguard the lives of everyone who might come after them. Currently it’s only astronauts

or billionair­es such as Musk and Bezos who are able to fleetingly exit the Earth’s atmosphere. It’s true that Earth will one day become uninhabita­ble as our sun ages, and that the wider universe will remain potentiall­y capable of supporting complex life for aeons beyond this.

Yet whether humans ever get a shot at settling other planets depends entirely on the actions of people who are currently alive. For this reason, our immediate priority should be safeguardi­ng our environmen­t and ensuring everyone is protected from extreme risks.

We have created the means to destroy ourselves and are presiding over the collapse of our environmen­t – yet we haven’t developed the institutio­ns or collective wisdom to prevent this. Before humans begin embarking on grand, multigener­ational projects such as reaching the stars, protecting people from these extreme risks is an urgent task for the present.

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 ??  ?? Space cowboys: Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson
Space cowboys: Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson

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