Issue #2(24) 2020 Security

Saving Earth – time for a new cooperative framework

A rocket approaching an asteroid that has drifted close to Earth. A scout probe orbits nearby.
A rocket approaching an asteroid that has drifted close to Earth. A scout probe orbits nearby.
Joseph N. Pelton ACES Worldwide, Washington DC, USA

Humanity, according to the world’s geologists, has entered the Anthropocene Epoch, a period within which human activity shapes the Earth’s geology and the so-called ecosphere. This new global-change dynamic prompts questions. Can humans survive the challenge of climate change and continued population growth? Can society survive a massive asteroid strike? Or can the modern world cope with the much-more-likely threat of a massive solar storm that destroys our satellites, the Internet, digital telecommunications networks and so on? Joseph Pelton sees the answers in space technology and cooperation.

It is ironic that, at a time when human knowledge and technology have risen to their highest levels, we are also at our most vulnerable. Today, human civilization, despite being at its largest and most wealthy, is also exposed to its highest level of existential risk. Ecologist Tim Morton has invented the term “hyper object” to refer to existential risk elements that are so vastly powerful and long term in nature that humans feel unable to respond to their potential destructive impact. He created the term to refer to climate change, but it could equally apply to asteroid strikes, solar storms or even the impacts of artificial intelligence or overpopulation.

Risks of this scale are very hard for individuals to comprehend, but space systems could make a positive contribution to the management of most hyper object threats. Clearly, this would involve the development of some new and demanding space technologies, such as defensive shielding systems for space threats, but it would also require new systems of international space law and cooperative agreement among space agencies and commercial space enterprises.

Indeed, the existence of such cosmic threats might be employed to make space agencies and commercial space companies more creative, more productive and better structured to cope with them.

If you already have a login and password to access www.room.eu.com - Please log in to be able to read all the articles of the site.

Popular articles

See also

Astronautics

National legislation provides incentives for private business

Specials

Shielding the human genome

Astronautics

Building a digital democracy in a planetary pandemic

Popular articles

Science

DNA across the universe - the new Noah’s Ark?

A future view of Mars where the sheltered Omaha Crater is being terraformed. Painting by James Vaughan. Lounge

Terraformal dreaming