Mission to Mars is necessary for ‘survival of human race’
A manned mission to Mars is necessary for our ‘species to survive’,
says Nasa chief Charles Bolden as he plots a three-step plan to land
humans on the red planet by 2030.
To achieve this stellar ambition, Mr Bolden, head of the US space
programme and a veteran space shuttle pilot, outlined a series of
‘stepping stones’ to Mars that include ‘lassoing’ an asteroid and
bringing it into the Moon’s orbit by 2015, growing plants in space and
using 3D printers for onboard repairs.
These steps in advance of a three-year return trip to the red planet
would not only bring scientists new samples from outer space but would
provide a valuable testing ground for key technologies necessary for
manned missions.
Speaking at the Humans to Mars summit, Mr Bolden told The Times: ‘If
this species is to survive indefinitely we need to become a multi-planet
species. We need to go to Mars, and Mars is a stepping stone to other
solar systems.’
Mr Bolden also revealed more projects under development. These
included Nasa’s Solar Electric Propulsion System - an Ion thruster that
uses beams of electrically-charged atoms to navigate in deep space – and
the Orion Multi-Purpose Crew Vehicle, which is billed as the next
generation of spacecrafts that will be used for future trips to the Moon
and Mars.
Critical to these bold plans, the space agency chief further highlighted the need for increased funding from the White House.
Mr Bolden, who flew the space shuttle that deployed the Hubble
telescope in 1990, added: ‘With some increases in Nasa’s budget, we’re
gonna be able to get to Mars in the 2030s.’


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