Environmentally Sustainable Human Space Activities: Can Challenges of Planetary Protection be Reconciled?
Author:
Molly K. Macauley a
| Affiliation: | a Resources for the Future, Washington, D.C. |
DOI:
10.1080/14777620701662345
Publication Frequency:
3 issues per year
Subjects:
Security Studies - Pol & Intl Relns;
Strategic Studies;
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Abstract
Scientists and other experts have long expressed concern about protecting the environments of other planets from human contamination. Their objective is to preserve those environments for the search for indigenous life and other scientific research that human contamination could confound or even preclude. Within the past few years, the United States has embarked on plans to extend human presence to other planets—notably, Mars, where the search for indigenous life is focused at present. Other countries may eventually have this goal as a long-run objective. Current international and national policies to protect other planetary environments are limited almost exclusively to governance of robotic exploration and do not address measures to be taken during activities conducted by humans. This article borrows from the domain of environmental policy to suggest the concept of environmental sustainability as a possible framework to mediate conflicting objectives associated with extending human presence in space. A key conclusion is that defining a balancing test to achieve sustainability requires more systematic and thorough discussion of rationales for an extended human space presence—a difficult but necessary dialog for achieving the stated goals of planetary protection.
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