Russia Claims America Wants to Dominate Lunar Energy Source

onedomino

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Sep 14, 2004
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Russia Sees Moon Plot in Nasa Plans
By Adrian Blomfield in Moscow
02/05/2007

Mankind's second race for the moon took on a distinctly Cold War feel yesterday when the Russian space agency accused its old rival Nasa of rejecting a proposal for joint lunar exploration.

The claim comes amid suspicion in Moscow that the United States is seeking to deny Russia access to an isotope in abundance under the moon's surface that many believe could replace fossil fuels and even end the threat of global warming...

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/05/01/wmoon01.xml and http://www.nasawatch.com/archives/2007/05/russia_claims_n.html

They are talking about Helium 3. It was first observed at UC Berkeley in 1939. It was an Australian physicist, Mark Oliphant, that theorized its existence in 1934. Used in the fusion reactors of the near future, 25 tons of HE3 would be enough to power the US for one year. One million tons of HE3 could generate 20 thousand terrawatt-years of thermal energy; ten times the energy available from mining all the remaining fossil fuels on Earth. Fusion reactions involving HE3 produce little radioactivity and no radioactive waste. There are problems with HE3 generated electrical power. One problem is that commercial scale HE3 fusion reactors have not yet been shown to be practical, much less demonstrated. This is partially because there is very little HE3 on Earth. The US possesses only about 29kg of HE3, and we can produce only about 15kg per year. An estimate of the value of HE3 is $3 billion per ton. Surveys of the Moon have indicated that there are about 1.1 million tons of HE3 available in the top few meters of the lunar surface. That $330 trillion worth of HE3. http://www.asi.org/adb/02/09/he3-intro.html Hence, an economic interest in returning to the Moon. America has announced plans to return to the Moon alone and set up permanent bases before 2024. Russia claims the reason is to dominate the supply of HE3.
 
It had to be only a matter of time before we were no longer satisfied with just screwing up our own environment.:badgrin:
I won't lose much sleep over the environmental effects of processing lunar surface material. In fact, if it cut our Middle East umbilical, I'd consider tossing the whole thing in a gigantic wood chipper. On second thought, that would mess up the tides and render songs like Moon River completely abstract. Perhaps you could start the Moon Regolith Reclamation Company; though you'll probably have to wait awhile before you issue the IPO.
 

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