Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos says there's a very simple reason his other company, Blue Origin, is working on a giant lunar lander to make moon travel as easy as an aeroplane flight: Humanity's very survival relies on colonizing space, starting with the moon.
So he told attendees during his time on stage Thursday at Amazon's inaugural Re: Mars tech conference taking place this week in Las Vegas. He was interviewed by Jenny Freshwater, the director of Amazon forecasting and capacity planning.
Last month, Bezos unveiled the lunar-lander vehicle, called Blue Moon, designed to deliver a variety of payloads to the moon with the ultimate goal of helping humans establish a "sustained human presence" there.
Bezos said that using the moon is all part of his plan to save humanity by helping build the infrastructure necessary for space colonization.
"The reason we've got to go to space, in my view, is to save the Earth," he said on Thursday. "If we're going to continue to grow this civilisation, we need to move – and I'm talking about something our grandchildren will work on and their grandchildren and so on. This isn't something just this generation is going to accomplish."
And the moon turns out to be the perfect landing spot for our eventual space needs for a variety of reason, Bezos said. It has water in the form of ice. It's close to Earth – a three-day ride, he said. It has access to solar energy. And its lighter gravity means that it takes "24 times less energy to lift a pound off the moon than it does Earth."
"To do big things in space, we need to use in-space resources. So the moon is great," Bezos said.
Zoning the Earth for light industry
And what about the Earth, in this plan? Bezos said it would no longer need to be home to our planet-killing factories.
"We need to move heavy industry off the Earth. It will be way better done in space anyway," he said. "And Earth will be rezoned residential and light industry."
If human civilisation is to keep growing, we have no choice but to move our production needs off Earth as a way to protect it, he said.
"We've sent probes to every planet in the solar system. This is the good one. It's not close," he said.
More seriously, he sees this as his way of paying it back and paying it forward. It's like his space version of the Pony Express.
"Amazon was easy to start in 1994 with a small amount of capital because the transportation system already existed, it was called the US Postal Service and Deutsche Post and Royal Mail," he said. There was already a financial system, credit cards, and a communication system, the internet.
If one company had to build all that from scratch, it would have cost billions of dollars.
This article was originally published by Business Insider.
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