Archive for the ‘Mark Hopkins’ Category

NSS Executive Committee Chair Quoted on Fox News

Tuesday, January 29th, 2013

In an online article about Deep Space Industries, the newly announced asteroid mining company, Fox News quoted NSS Executive Committee Chair Mark Hopkins as follows:

“They have the potential to make an enormous amount of money,” Mark Hopkins, a founding member of the Space Development Steering Committee and the Chair of the Exec. Committee of the National Space Society, told FoxNews.com.

“It’s a risky venture. But if they don’t make it some other company is likely to do it in the future,” Hopkins said. “[Space mining] has the potential of restoring the American dream in the minds of Americans and the rest of the world.”

Hopkins is a former Rand Corporation economist.

See full Fox News article.

Life in outer space? 37-year-old NASA project depicts how leading minds of the time dreamed about colonizing space

Friday, December 14th, 2012

The New York Daily News published this story on December 13, 2012.

The story quotes two National Space Society Directors: Mark Hopkins and Al Globus.

“Amazing artwork from the 1970s shows scientists’ vision of creating settlements in space. They got most of it right, say experts. But funding for the massive endeavor remains a large hurdle.”

Read the story at: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/amazing-1970s-artwork-envisions-colonized-space-article-1.1219511

See higher resolution versions of all the art work on the NSS website: http://www.nss.org/settlement/nasa/70sArt/art.html

Image: Cutaway view of the Stanford Torus space settlement design for 10,000 inhabitants. From Space Settlements: A Design Study, NASA SP-413 (1977), online at http://www.nss.org/settlement/nasa/75SummerStudy/Design.html.

National Space Society Hails Space Solar Power Study Findings

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

The National Space Society (NSS) and SPACE Canada held a press conference on November 14, 2011 at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C to announce the findings of a ground-breaking space solar power study conducted by the International Academy of Astronautics (IAA) under the leadership of John Mankins, a 25-year NASA veteran and expert on space solar power.

See video of the press conference on the NSS website.

The IAA’s three-year, ten-nation study, “Space Solar Power — The First International Assessment of Space Solar Power: Opportunities, Issues and Potential Pathways Forward,” confirms the possible readiness of using space solar power technology within the decade.

The full report is included in the NSS Space Solar Power Library.

Comments from environmentalists, scientists, aerospace engineers, and advocates in the space and clean energy movements are also available on the NSS website here.

Gary Barnhard, the Executive Director of NSS stated “The IAA report lays out the case quite clearly. Space Solar Power is one of the potential key elements in meeting the growing and evolving electrical energy demand of the United States and the world. Space Solar Power is not a panacea, nor is it engineering fantasy. Space Solar Power is a complex systems engineering and economics problem that entails learning how to build the most valuable system(s) and when to do so in order to best meet electrical energy needs. Space Solar Power is an option we can make real and in doing so help provide for a positive future for humanity.”

“With space solar power technology, energy can be collected from space and transmitted wirelessly anywhere in the world,” explained Mark Hopkins, the Chairman of the Executive Committee of the National Space Society. “This technology could be the answer to our energy crisis. We look forward to sharing the results of the IAA’s study, and exploring the potential that space solar power has for creating thousands of green energy jobs,” he said.

Collecting solar energy to convert to electricity is not a new concept. However, there are significant advantages to space solar power compared to ground solar power. Solar energy in space is seven times greater per unit area than on the ground. The collection of solar space energy is not disrupted by nightfall and inclement weather, thus avoiding the need for expensive energy storage.

Mr. Hopkins added, “Our dependence on crude oil is simply unsustainable, and other energy sources can be costly and harmful to the environment. As a continuous source of energy, space solar power is a potential cost-effective and environmentally superior energy alternative.”

NSS to Attend China Energy Summit

Tuesday, August 23rd, 2011

NSS members including Mark Hopkins (NSS CEO), David Dunlop (Region 6 Director), and Dr. Feng Hsu (formerly of NASA and now Senior Vice President of Space Energy Group) will attend the China Energy and Environment Summit in Beijing on August 28th and 29th.

Mark Hopkins and Feng Hsu have been given the opportunity for a keynote address during the opening session. Hsu’s topic will be “Space Based Solar Power as a Safe and Sustainable Alternative to Nuclear Energy.”

“This is the first time in human history that spaced based solar power has been included as a major topic in an international energy summit that is hosted by a major energy-consuming nation,” says Hsu. “I am sure that after this summit, space based solar power (as one of the potential approaches for collecting the sun’s energy in a base-load scale) will get its fair share of attention by top global politicians as it has been long overdue.”

Dr. Hsu’s visit and the topic of space solar power is highlighted in an article in the People’s Daily of China [English version] [Chinese version]. More information about the conference can be found on the China Energy and Environment Summit website.

The Future of the Space Program

Monday, July 11th, 2011

National Space Society CEO Mark Hopkins issues the following statment based on his speech at the 2011 International Space Development Conference (see 7-minute video of speech). For media interviews contact Mark.Hopkins@nss.org.


The ultimate goal of the National Space Society is nothing less than the settlement of space and the use of its vast resources for the dramatic betterment of humanity.

According to the Augustine Report, which set the stage for the human space program proposed by President Obama, a Democrat: …the ultimate goal of human exploration is to chart a path for human expansion into the solar system.

According to Dr. John Marburger, science advisor to the just previous president, George Bush, a Republican: President Bush’s space vision…is to begin now for a future in which the material trapped in the sun’s vicinity is available for incorporation into our way of life.

Democrats, Republicans, and the National Space Society all agree in a general sense as to what the future of humanity in space should be.

The National Space Society’s near-term strategy is to support those aspects of the space program that most accelerate humanity’s drive towards this goal.

It has been said many times that the Earth’s resources are limited and this is true. It is also true that the average human is very poor by American standards. The poverty line in the United States is a factor of three below our per capita income. The average human lives at a standard of living well below our poverty line. The per capita income of the average human is a factor of seven below that of the average American.

In the long run, the average human standard of living should be increased to at least what it is in the United States today. Even if we assume that human population does not increase and that the American standard of living does not increase, then to accomplish this goal, the human economy must increase by a factor of seven. To a first approximation, this means that resource consumption must also be increased by a factor of seven. When we take into account the fact that in actuality the population will continue to increase and that we want the standard of living of America and other developed countries to increase and rightfully so, then this factor of seven becomes much larger. Where will we obtain the needed resources and do so in an environmentally benign fashion?

The media has bombarded the American public with the idea that resources are limited, that we are beginning to reach resource constraints, and that the environment is deteriorating.

According to polls taken just before the current recession, the average American believes, for the first time in history, that future generations will be worse off than they are. Europeans are even more pessimistic.

A fundamental part of the American dream is that each generation will be better off than the one before. Americans no longer believe this to be true. There is a profound hunger in the land for a vision of the future, which allows the American dream to be restored.

Fortunately, the vast majority of the resources of the solar system in terms of both energy and materials lie in space rather than on the Earth. This is true by many orders of magnitude.

For example, the Sun produces 10 trillion, that is TRILLION with a T, times the amount of energy currently consumed by humans.

In the long run — and I will not speculate tonight on how long it will be — the Earth’s resource constraints can be overcome by the resources of space.

There are some who argue that Americans should seek to meekly accommodate themselves with the resource constraints of Earth. This is not the American way. Americans deal with constraints by SMASHING them. In the long run, space allows us to do this.

What does all of this mean?

Space is not just about obtaining new technology, although that is important.

Space is not just about applications, such as communication satellites, although that is important.

Space is not just about new knowledge, although that is important.

Space is not just about exploration, although that is important.

Space is not just about defense, although that is important.

Space is not just about all of these benefits combined plus the other benefits commonly cited by the space community.

Space is far more important. Space is nothing less than the foundation of the human future. American society as a whole has not fully grasped this fact, because we in the space community are overly modest.

Space is not a luxury. Space is not nice to have. Space is of fundamental importance to human destiny.

Space and its resources can provide a prosperous future, a future which restores the American dream, a hopeful future for all.

Popular Science Magazine: The Case for Populating the Universe

Saturday, March 12th, 2011

The March issue of Popular Science magazine provides a feature cover story titled “After Earth: The Case for Populating the Universe — and How We’ll Get There.”  The 11-page nicely-illustrated article covers a wide range of space exploration and development topics and includes mention of the National Space Society and several other space advocacy organizations. NSS CEO Mark Hopkins is quoted, as is the chairman of the NSS Space Settlement Advocacy Committee, Al Globus. The article is also available online.

The article concludes with two piquant quotes:

Gregory Benford, physics professor, NASA consultant, and science fiction author, points out that “We Americans think we are basically the Columbus of space, making big discoveries. But I’m afraid we might be the Leif Eriksson. We go, we try a few things, and then it largely gets forgotten.”

Marc Millis, a NASA propulsion physicist who also runs the Tau Zero Foundation, concludes that colonizing space “isn’t just about survival, it’s about thriving…. What [better] can we do that makes for an exciting future to live in? Something where when you wake up in the morning you’re glad to be alive and a human?”

Japan and Support of the International Space Station

Saturday, January 29th, 2011


Previously, we looked at the Europeans Space Agency (ESA) and their ATV program, which is preparing to send their resupply spacecraft, Johannes Kepler, to the International Space Station on 15 February.

Now, we look at the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and the recently completed launch and capture of the Kounotori spacecraft.


HTV-2 ATV-2
HTV-2 “Kounotori”
Image Credit: Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA)


The external exposed cargo includes a Flex Hose Rotary Coupler and Cargo Transport Container. These spare parts will be transferred to External Logistics Carrier 4 after it is installed during the Discovery STS-133 mission.

The pressurized cargo space is carrying 2,928 kilograms of supplies and equipment:

  • 630 kilograms of crew provisions
  • 1,626 kilograms of research equipment and supplies
  • 609 kilograms) of station hardware
  • 49 kilograms of computers and supplies
  • 14 kilograms of spacewalking equipment and supplies

Among the new research equipment will be the Japanese Kobairo gradient heating furnace for generating high-quality crystals from melting materials, an Amine Swingbed technology demonstration that will look at ways to revitalize the air on space vehicles, and the International Space Station Agricultural Camera, which will take frequent images, in visible and infrared light, of vegetated areas on the Earth.


HTV2
Canadarm2 Captures HTV2
Image Credit: NASA

Hatch Open
Removing cargo through the hatch on HTV2
Image Credit: JAXA

Why Not Space Solar Power?

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

Mon, 13 September, 2010
www.spacenews.com/commentaries

By Don Flournoy

The 2010 U.S. National Space Policy, which supports a robust and competitive commercial space sector, is good news for those of us working to design and launch the new types of satellites that will collect solar energy in space and deliver it to Earth as a nonpolluting source of electrical power.

Among the goals of President Barack Obama’s National Space Policy is expansion of international cooperation on mutually beneficial space activities to “broaden and extend the benefits of space” and “further the peaceful use of space.”

As members of the National Space Society, the Society of Satellite Professionals International and the Space Energy Group, we believe space, as a shared resource, can best be explored and developed by a partnership of nations and businesses working together.

Since acquiring clean and abundant energy is a common requirement for economic growth and an eventual necessity for the health of all societies, harvesting space solar power is a logical human endeavor when the high frontier is precisely where energy is most plentiful. But achieving success doing large-scale commercial innovation in outer space requires long-range planning, pooling of financial resources, sharing of knowledge and expertise, and the careful framing of a way forward that will earn and sustain the public trust.

In naming the CEOs who will serve on his new advisory board on trade issues, Obama noted in July that the U.S. is on track to double exports in the next five years, and he pointed to some of the ways the American economy is being repositioned to better compete abroad. When adding that announcement to the outcomes of the June summit of the Group of 20 major industrial countries in Canada and recent federal policy statements intimating that (certain) export controls will be relaxed and cooperation in space will be encouraged, it would appear that the U.S. could be entering a new era of openness for international business.

To this end, we would like to see some greater leadership and support given to space solar power development by NASA and the U.S. departments of Energy and Commerce. A helpful first step would be a U.S.-led space solar power feasibility study to which all interested nations are invited to contribute.

In the context of the U.S. National Space Policy, such a feasibility study could lead the way in assessing and promoting “appropriate cost and risk sharing among participating nations in international partnerships.” It would demonstrate U.S. “tangible leadership in space,” leveraging the capabilities of allies while assuring continuing adherence to the U.N. Treaty on Exploration and Use of Outer Space — now signed by 125 states, including China and India — that dictates “nuclear weapons and other weapons of mass destruction” shall not be placed in outer space.

At the International Space Development Conference held in Chicago in May, multiple nations participated in a National Space Society-initiated Solar Power Symposium to examine in depth opportunities and challenges for energy generation in near space. Former Indian President A.P.J. Abdul Kalam, scientist, aeronautical engineer and proponent of space solar power, addressing the symposium via videoconference, spoke to the need for international cooperation in space. He proposed a multilateral global initiative that could map out for us what needs to be done to bring space solar power to operational reality.

From our perspective, space solar power is a meaningful science, engineering and commercial challenge that deserves our attention and investment. In the wake of the Gulf of Mexico oil disaster, we think it is time for the U.S. to put space solar power on our national energy agenda. At the same time, we must seek opportunities to learn from and participate with Canada, China, India, Japan, the European Union and others taking their first tentative steps to bring space solar energy to Earth.

In a June Times of India commentary on strategic international diplomacy, U.S. Sen. John Kerry expressed support for a partnership with India that would include “the quest for new technologies and fresh ideas for economically viable ways to speed the shift to renewable energy sources.”

We believe that within the mainstream of global science, engineering and environmental management there are game-changing ideas and technologies that await testing. It is time to see some space solar power demonstration projects. Of all the possible alternative energy sources on the near horizon, we believe space solar power is our best chance for addressing the worldwide challenges of climate change, renewable energy and continued economic growth.
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Don Flournoy is a professor and editor of the Online Journal of Space Communication (www.spacejournal.org) at Ohio University. This article also reflects the opinions of Robert Bell of the Society of Satellite Professionals International, Mark Hopkins of the National Space Society, Stephan Tennsel of Space Energy AG, and Feng Hsu of the Space Energy Group.

The Long Run Geopolitics of Space Settlements

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

NSS CEO Mark Hopkins writes on The Long Run Geopolitics of Space Settlements in the latest issue of Ad Astra magazine. Below is a précis.

The vast majority of the resources of the solar system are in space rather than on the Earth. As I have argued in an earlier column, there are enough materials in the solar system to build O’Neill space settlements with a combined land area of one million times the land area of the Earth. Given the available land area, it is likely that the vast majority of humans in the solar system will eventually live in space. Let’s assume this is true and ask, what are the geopolitical implications?

If the vast majority live in space and their per capita income is at least as large as those who live on the Earth, it follows that the size of the space economy will be much greater than the Earth economy. Thus, space settlers will eventually dominate human solar system civilization in the economic, military, cultural and technological spheres.

To better grasp the enormity of what this means, consider what happened when the Old World (loosely Afro-Eurasia) added the New World (loosely North and South America) to create the first worldwide economy and civilization. The result was profound. Yet the increase in land area of the Old World plus the New World compared to the Old World by itself was only a factor of 1.5 – not one million.

Who leads the space settlement effort will have a profound impact on the future of human civilization. This is a fundamental geopolitical consideration that all those who care about the future of humanity need to take into account.

Read the whole article.

Space settlement is the alternative to a pessimistic future

Monday, April 19th, 2010

NSS Senior Operating Officer Mark Hopkins writes on Alternative Futures in the latest issue of Ad Astra magazine:

Because the Earth is running out of resources, the media is full of stories about our limited future. The public has been told over and over again that we live on a planet with finite resources, that the economic system is closed, resource availability is declining, and the environment is deteriorating.

As a consequence, for the first time in history Americans are pessimistic. A fundamental part of the American dream is that each generation will be better off than the previous one. Polls taken before the current recession show that Americans no longer believe this to be true. Pessimism about the future among Europeans is even greater.

But the reason for all of this pessimism is not true. Members of the Space Movement know that resources are not limited to those which are available on Earth. We can tap into the truly vast resources that await in space. Space is the alternative to a pessimistic future.

Read full article.