Fleming Maxwell, Lange Ian, Shojaeinia Sayeh, Stuermer Martin
Division of Economics and Business, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO 80401.
Research Department, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC 20004.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2023 Oct 24;120(43):e2221345120. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2221345120. Epub 2023 Oct 16.
Growth models with resources and environmental externalities typically assume that planet Earth is a closed economy. However, private firms like Blue Origin and SpaceX have reduced the cost of rocket launches by a factor of 20 over the last decade. What if these costs continue to decline, making mining from asteroids or the moon feasible? What would be the implications for economic growth and the environment? This paper provides stylized facts about cost trends, geology, and the environmental impact of mining on Earth and potentially in Space. We extend a neoclassical growth model to investigate the transition from mining on Earth to Space. We find that such a transition could potentially allow for continued growth of metal use, while limiting environmental and social costs on Earth. Acknowledging the high uncertainty around the topic, our paper provides a starting point for research on how Space mining could contribute to sustainable growth on Earth.
具有资源和环境外部性的增长模型通常假设地球是一个封闭经济体。然而,像蓝色起源公司(Blue Origin)和太空探索技术公司(SpaceX)这样的私人公司在过去十年中将火箭发射成本降低了20倍。如果这些成本继续下降,使得从小行星或月球采矿变得可行,那对经济增长和环境会有什么影响?本文提供了有关成本趋势、地质情况以及地球上和潜在太空中采矿对环境影响的典型事实。我们扩展了一个新古典增长模型来研究从地球上采矿到太空采矿的转变。我们发现,这种转变可能会使金属使用量持续增长,同时限制地球上的环境和社会成本。鉴于该主题存在高度不确定性,我们的论文为研究太空采矿如何促进地球上的可持续增长提供了一个起点。