Private space flight raises the question: Can private
companies improve other government services?
The successful return
of the Dragon-X space cargo capsule recently shows that the era of private
commercial space flight has begun.
The unmanned capsule
was built and operated by Space
Exploration Technologies (Space-X), a 10-year-old company owned by Paypal founder and
billionaire Elon
Musk. Dragon-X carried 500 kg of supplies and equipment to the
International Space Station and returned with about 650 kg of retired equipment
and scientific samples.
It used to be the
accepted wisdom that space flight was the province of governments: the
resources (money and manpower) needed for space missions were so expensive that
only big federal agencies could afford them. Space-X's Musk has turned this
idea on its head.
The National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (Nasa) itself has sought to move space
flight to private companies in recent years. Its space shuttles flew their last
missions in 2011; American astronauts currently board Russian and European
spacecraft to go to the International Space Station. Space-X is vying for a
$1.6 billion Nasa
contract for 12 supply missions to the International Space Station. It also has
plans to start ferrying astronauts into orbit. Nor is it the only one. There is
healthy competition among private companies to see who gets there first.
In the 1960s, space
became a theatre of the Cold War as superpowers United States
and the USSR raced each other to prove technical superiority. By the end of the
decade, American astronauts Neil Armstrong
and Buzz Aldrin
had walked on the Moon. It was a triumph of
engineering: the United States had won the space race.
Four decades later,
amidst a weak economy, there is no appetite among American politicians for the
big taxpayer-funded spending Nasa's manned space flights need. Russia's space
programme is particularly in dire straits. While countries like India and China
have space aspirations, and have had good successes in recent years, today the
most interesting proposals are coming from the private sector.
Space has gone back to
being the province of obsessed dreamers — which is where it all started. Early
rocketry and space flight pioneers such as Robert Goddard
and Hermann Oberth were ins-pired by science fiction. They conducted rocketry
experiments as kids and constantly thought about how humans could get rid of
our earthly shackles. Few who knew them as kids probably thought their dreams
would be realised. Yet, man not only went into orbit, but walked on the Moon in
the 20th century.
Today, Musk wants to
retire on Mars,
and Virgin Galactic's Richard Branson
plans to offer space tourism flights. Film director and explorer James Cameron
has announced he is interested in mining asteroids for precious metals.
Private entrepreneurs
have always advanced new technologies, even if they are not the original
inventors. Look at the history of the railway. A working steam locomotive was
developed by Richard Trevithick in Cornwall, years before George
Stephenson built the Stockton and Darlington railway. But it was Stephenson
who was entrepreneurial enough to make trains successful.
English inventor Joseph Swan
constructed a working incandescent light bulb years before Thomas Alva Edison,
who is widely credited with its invention. Swan even set up a com-pany to
market his invention. But it was Edison's entrepreneurship and scheme for
electricity distribution that eventually won the day. (Swan's company later
merged with Edison's.)
Private entrepreneurs
can often reduce costs drastically. Musk has estimated that Space-X can launch
one kg of payload into orbit at about one-ninth Nasa's cost.
At this point, it is
still early days for private commercial space flight. But there is no
doubt that we are witnessing the beginning of a new era, when private
corporations will make space their own turf. Space-X is working on creating
manned space taxis next. While Came-ron's avowed desire to mine asteroids may
sound more in the realm of science fiction than science fact, it might indeed
be technically feasible (although the jury is still out on the economic
benefits, because any precious metals mined this way would be plentiful enough
to see their prices drop).
Science fiction author Arthur C
Clarke predicted shortly before his death in 2008 that commercial
spacecraft would become a reality within the decade. Space-X was making plans
then. He also told me that he believed thousands would travel into orbit in the
next 50 years, and then people would go to the Moon and beyond on private
spacecraft.
It is worth asking what private entrepreneurs
could do for other large public enterprises. For instance, could a private
enterprise improve rail service in India? Would a private corporation do a
better job than Indian Railways of running, say, a high-speed Delhi-Mumbai rail
corridor?
And what about India Post ? Should the government look
into privatising the postal service, or at least sections of it? Anyone who
goes to a post office in India recognises that there are things the government
doesn't do particularly well.
When one thinks about
it, there are probably only a few things that governments should always do.
National security is of course the obvious example. Health monitoring and
national healthcare may be another. Most things that we have thought were the
province of governments can be done just as well by public-private partnerships
— or just private enterprises. By sending a rocket to space, Space-X has just
proven it to us.
Source : The times of
India, June 27, 2012
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