Planetary Resources To 'Claim' Asteroids With Beacons
kkleiner writes "Planetary Resources last year boldly claimed that they would build a futuristic business out of mining space asteroids. To that end, the firm recently completed the Arkyd-100 satellite prototype. The satellite will use its telescope to look for suitable near-Earth asteroids from low-Earth orbit. Later expeditions will rocket out to prospective real estate, do spectral analysis, and if the asteroid contains valuable resources, lay claim with a beacon."
Not legally enforceable, which in many ways is a shame. Until money can be made through space travel, it will never "take off"...
Mod informative, flamebait or funny
Unless they have Space Police out there. Who knows how this would turn out, but it does raise another issue - when we finally get off of our collective asses and start a more aggressive space program(s), who the heck is gonna regulate commodities, etc out in space?
"As the intrepid kobold companion continues his journey, he begins to wonder... if priests raises dead, why anybody die?
Manifest Destiny... iiiiinnnnn spaaaaaaaaaace!
Proverbs 21:19
Not only not enforceable: I always thought that there were treaties against this, as in no private company from any country can claim anything outside the atmosphere without some sort of international agreement. See Outer Space Treaty.
Ezekiel 23:20
Perhaps more sensible would be show your ability by building an actual mine, etc. Otherwise, "laser trolls" would disrupt the business of decent, able miners.
So I know whose asteroid crashed into my house.
So Awesome.
This Valentine's day, give your mistress the gift that's out of this world. Claim an asteroid for her...
Absent international treaty or a national law (assuming their competition can be assailed in the court system), anyone with a plan like this will be forced to defend their claims the old fashioned way: by force. Will the beacons have probe-disabling lasers on board? The article doesn't say. But my guess is that the cost of getting a defense system on the rock is the same as the cost of getting mining equipment on it.
A better defense plan is to scan 10 times as many rocks as you normally would and leave beacons on all of them. Then develop either stealthy or very fast mining tech for phase 2.
What do you mean they cut the power? How can they cut the power, man? They're animals!
Why bother mining asteroids when there is a bunch of pre-refined materials floating in LEO. Re-refine the materials in Proton boosters, non-functional satellites and such. Stop throwing used up stuff back into the atmosphere to burn up. Build a refinery at the Space Station.
China and Japan will lay claim to the same asteroid.
Space Bacons?
I bet in teh futuar, bacon will be a highly sought after luxury in space.
Just imagine the immense wealth for the daring astro-prospector that finds a whole asteroid of bacon.
Bets on what comes first, the maternity station (confinement asteroid for you belters...) or the bacon astro-farm?
(just as long as it's not this type...)
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
I am not sure how this fits in the Outer Space Treaty, and thus what recourse they would have if (say) the Chinese used their beacons as a prospecting tool.
On the other hand, such beacons would probably make good VLBI targets.
All they need to do is lick each one. Any four-year-old knows that.
Can't they just lay claim like the Bering Sea Gold Miners (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt2182427/) do? They use GPS coordinates to plot an area where the claim is. Or is it the meteors move from sector to sector so that is not possible? Also in other mining places like California you can make the claim but you also have to prove that you are doing something with it.
Paul: Father... father, the sleeper has awakened! - Dune
People have been camping things in MMOs for years.
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
I'm pretty sure Grand Fenwick isn't a signatory either. IMO, a much more appropriate choice.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
The Belt or ASTEX ?
On the one hand, mineral claims have a long history and seem to have worked decently.
On the other hand, how do we prevent an unscrupulous company from doing just enough work to *claim* these asteroids, with no intention of actually following through and mining them. Then, acting as a rent-seeker when another company actually does try to mine the resources?
If you are into this kind of stuff you might find The High Frontier a good read. It's a very positive, forward thinking book by Gerard K. O'Neill wich was written "when people looked up to the sky instead down on their iPhones" (as I read somewhere on the internet).
Thanks for marking all the valuable 'roids for our firm.
We'll let you know what we found. Maybe you'll get a finders fee, who knows ?
If only we could fall into a woman's arms without falling into her hands
But that shouldn't stop anybody from mining the material anyway. You can own what you extract. You just shouldn't be allowed to "own" the raw materials.
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Now, they have told the CHinese were to go dig. And dig they will. At the very least, they will scan these and know what the company is interested in.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Look, I don't care if you plant a flag or a beacon on some asteroid, if I can actually build a spaceship that can go and grab it and mine it before you do, your shit out of luck. I'll just kick your little beacon off, or move it to something else that has no value. What are you going to do about it?
I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
Do they have a flag?
!#@%*)anks for hanging up the phone, dear.
I guess I missed the part where mining on earth become more expensive than in FUCKING OUTER SPACE
Why not just StarWars it to the death!?!?
You can lay claim to anything you desire but it doesn't mean others will respect your claim. There has to be a consensus on what is needed to make a claim first and even that is blurry and will chance over time.
The main basis of a claim is having the resources and will to defend it and publicly declaring it.
...water is good for other reasons...
If you had a [near-]monopoly on the ready-to-use water supply in space, or even be one of several competing suppliers, you wouldn't even have to bother stripping the metals from the asteroids.
They'd better hope none of "their" asteriods hits the earth. The potential liability could be ruinous.
If you can stake a claim without having the ability to mine in space it allows early players to claim everything with little investment and tax mining that others develop. This would be against the best interests of everyone but the claimant. In order to stake a claim you should have to prove you can mine the resources you claim.
I would think if one were to go to the trouble of determining the resources were on it he might not want to alert anyone else. Especially not when there is no method of enforcement against someone else coming along and mining it.
Planetary Resources clearly knows that staking a claim to an asteroid would be tenuous at best, and if they're actually afraid of someone else swooping in ahead of them, then they must know that their best bet would be to just keep secret the existence of the asteroid their planning on mining.
I think a better explanation for the beacon story is that it would be a marketing and promotions gimmick. It's a milestone they'd be able to take to potential investors and customers and say, "Hey, we're for real. We're not just some hack outfit. Look, we've even already landed an object on the asteroid we're going to be mining." It's also part of a plan to paint their whole endeavour as just another version of historical human mining, i.e., prospect -> stake a claim -> get rich mining, as opposed to treating their plans as some sort of fanciful sci-fi thought experiment.
. . . some time in the Twenty Fourth and a Half Century!
Any idiot can hoist a flag. The first person who CAN mine an asteroid for profit, should be the first person to profit from it.
Sorry, I actually called dibs first. That stands up in court just as well so good luck suing me. By the way, US law sort of works exactly like that where you flag it, it's yours, but the world/UN rules differ quite a bit. Well, down on Earth at least. The unofficial policy at the moment is you grab it, it's yours up in space.
We have no ability to mine anything whatsoever in space. At all. If they're making money at this it's through lying to gullible fools raised on more sci-fi than sci.
As shown in this Super-8 film made in about 1980, the claim beacon can be defeated by blocking it's radio transmissions. But if the miner has a nuclear license then watch out!
Please excuse the bad acting:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mPaPe3aJEPI
I say, go with the old homesteading laws. Someone has to move to the asteroid, live there seven years and "prove it up," as in: make significant improvements to the property.
Isn't this something on the lines of vague patents here in mobile world ?
Mine the moon if you want, where you want. But why to 'own' it.
I hereby throw my virtual red long beacon on all the asteroids with rounded or sharp edges which I can mine when I feel to and there by restricts everyone who have the capacity to do it.
Do you consider yourself to be a better investor than Eric E. Schmidt, K. Ram Shriram, Charles Simonyi, Larry Page and Ross Perot, Jr
People like that have a lot more disposable income than I to risk on a lark on a high-risk venture.
My investments need to pay off in ~20 years so I'm not eating cat food in my old age. meow!
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Vacation Trip Rules apply in this scenario.
"I get the window seat! I called it!"
Generally, the nations of the world fall back on these rules when Intergalactic Law falls short.