Asteroid mining venture backed by James Cameron, Google CEO Larry Page

Artist's rendition of asteroid mining / Planetary Resources
(AP) WASHINGTON - A group of high-tech tycoons wants to mine nearby asteroids, hoping to turn science fiction into real profits.
The mega-million dollar plan is to use commercially built robotic ships to squeeze rocket fuel and valuable minerals like platinum and gold out of the lifeless rocks that routinely whiz by Earth. One of the company founders predicts they could have their version of a space-based gas station up and running by 2020.
The inaugural step, to be achieved in the next 18 to 24 months, would be launching the first in a series of private telescopes that would search for rich asteroid targets.
Several scientists not involved in the project said they were simultaneously thrilled and skeptical, calling the plan daring, difficult - and highly expensive. They struggle to see how it could be cost-effective, even with platinum and gold worth nearly $1,600 an ounce. An upcoming NASA mission to return just 2 ounces (60 grams) of an asteroid to Earth will cost about $1 billion.
But the entrepreneurs announcing the project Tuesday in Seattle have a track record of making big money off ventures into space. Company founders Eric Anderson and Peter Diamandis pioneered the idea of selling rides into space to tourists and, Diamandis' company offers "weightless" airplane flights.
Investors and advisers to the new company, Planetary Resources Inc. of Seattle, include Google CEO Larry Page and Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt and explorer and filmmaker James Cameron.
The mining, fuel processing and later refueling would all be done without humans, Anderson said.
"It is the stuff of science fiction, but like in so many other areas of science fiction, it's possible to begin the process of making them reality," said former astronaut Thomas Jones, an adviser to the company.
The target-hunting telescopes would be tubes only a couple of feet long, weighing only a few dozen pounds and small enough to be held in your hand. They should cost less than $10 million, company officials said.
The idea that asteroids could be mined for resources has been around for years. Asteroids are the leftovers of a failed attempt to form a planet billions of years ago. Most of the remnants became the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter, but some pieces were pushed out to roam the solar system.
Asteroids are made mostly of rock and metal and range from a couple of dozen feet wide to nearly 10 miles long. The new venture targets the free-flying asteroids, seeking to extract from them the rare Earth platinum metals that are used in batteries, electronics and medical devices, Diamandis said.
Water can be broken down in space to liquid oxygen and liquid hydrogen for rocket fuel. Water is very expensive to get off the ground so the plan is to take it from an asteroid to a spot in space where it can be converted into fuel. From there, it can easily and cheaply be shipped to Earth orbit for refueling commercial satellites or spaceships from NASA and other countries.
In the past couple of years, NASA and other space agencies have shifted their attention from the moon and other planets toward asteroids. Because asteroids don't have any substantial gravity, targeting them costs less fuel and money than going to the moon, Anderson said in a phone interview.
There are probably 1,500 asteroids that pass near Earth that would be good initial targets. They are at least 160 feet (50 meters) wide, and Anderson figures 10 percent of them have water and other valuable minerals.
"A depot within a decade seems incredible. I hope there will be someone to use it," said Andrew Cheng at Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Lab, who was the chief scientist for a NASA mission to an asteroid a decade ago. "And I have high hopes that commercial uses of space will become profitable beyond Earth orbit. Maybe the time has come."
Space experts said such a bold project has huge startup costs. Diamandis and Anderson would not disclose how much the project will cost overall. Diamandis said by building and launching quickly, the company will operate much cheaper than NASA.
But still the costs are just too high, said Purdue University planetary geologist Jay Melosh, who called space exploration "a sport that only wealthy nations, and those wishing to demonstrate their technical prowess, can afford to indulge."
Anderson, who co-founded the space tourism business, said he's used to skeptics.
"Before we started launching people into space as private citizens, people thought that was a pie-in-the-sky idea," Anderson said. "We're in this for decades. But it's not a charity. And we'll make money from the beginning."
Popular in SciTech
- Amazon proposes a colossal biospherelike Seattle campus
- Weird pirate ant comes with an "eye patch"
- Jennifer Lopez to open Verizon cellphone stores
- The 7 weirdest things made by 3D printing
- Watch: Biggest solar storm of the year Play Video
- Google to add Galapagos Islands to Street View
- Apple's next iPhone may be coming in June
- NASA funds 3D pizza printer















As a geologist with some mineral resource experience, I would advise Plantary Resources to get themselves a reputable geologist or mining engineer before their future press releases, since their first one has violated a number of internationally-accepted resource reporting standards, e.g. not reporting hypothetical values, not reporting economics of any mineral resource to which you don't have title or rights, reporting gross refined metal values (unless you already have an integrated mine-concentrating-refining supply chain in place), and reporting of any potential value that has not been sampled by drilling, trenching, etc. Cameron should know this already: as a Canadian, he knows that mineral resource reporting is governed by Canada's National Instrument 43-101, a framework that was developed following the movie-worthy gold stock scandal of early 1990's by Bre-X. As Mark Twain famously said, "A mine is a hole in the ground with a liar at the top," a statement that could be modified to asteroids if PR continues to report hyperbolic "news" of their venture.
Where mining companies go from destroying the earth, to being the ones who are saving it. Where humans who wish to live off the earth, may be free to do just that.
Life in the cosmos is rare, making it what is this planets greatest wealth, and there are many here who realize that, and that improving the environment for life to exist is also very survival related (if all humans went 'green' instead of a trashed world they would turn it (back) into a garden.)
Those who seek to live in sterile environments and inside of containers, are on the natural path to living in space (away from earth orbit).
The greater profit potential that is realized, the sooner the technology of an Eco-friendly affordable means of reaching escape velocity will developed due to the profit potential for same.
So those who want to live "off" the earth, can do just that.
Earth, love it, or leave it, in peace.
And in that name I pray for their expedient success in these next steps, of human evolution.
The perfect example of the sheer magnitude of WASTE of finite fossil fuels- burning tons of it to take morons into space and back.