Got some cash to burn? Book a room at nuclear-powered Moon base

Got some cash to burn? Book a room at nuclear-powered Moon base

Wealthy people with some extra cash to burn may soon be able to do just that, and shoot for the moon. Literally.

Russia’s Roscosmos space company is considering building a nuclear-powered base on the Moon, that will be commercially available for rent to anyone who’s willing to pay for it. The $462-million project is set to be unveiled in nine years.

The 70-ton facility, dubbed Patron Moon, will house up to 50 people wealthy and fearless enough to live on the Earthโ€™s satellite. The lunar base, split into three retractable living modules, will get electricity from a small nuclear power plant.

The $462-million project seems too futuristic at a glance, but the company claims it knows in detail how to make it come true. At the first stage, Roscosmos will ship all elements of the base to the Moon aboard a super-heavy rocket โ€˜Yeniseiโ€™.

Once the Patron Moon reaches the surface, it will dig into the ground. The living modules, a universal docking port and โ€œmulti-function drillsโ€ will be put together and connected to the power plant.

To cover research and development costs, Roscosmos will offer the base for rent, but the bad news is its price โ€“ each space will cost from $10 to $30 million. The good news is that the Patron Moon will only be rolled out until after 2028, giving potential Moon travelers the whole lot of years to make that money.

Russia, along with other world powers, has an ambitious Moon exploration program. Its current lunar plan is to build a new heavy-lift launch vehicle over the next decade and use it to create a permanent base on the surface.

Previously, Roscosmos officials shed some light on the future base, telling the press that it will benefit from โ€œlocal resourcesโ€ and make use of โ€œavatar robots.โ€

WHAT TO TAKE AWAY FROM THIS ARTICLE:

  • Its current lunar plan is to build a new heavy-lift launch vehicle over the next decade and use it to create a permanent base on the surface.
  • Russia’s Roscosmos space company is considering building a nuclear-powered base on the Moon, that will be commercially available for rent to anyone who’s willing to pay for it.
  • At the first stage, Roscosmos will ship all elements of the base to the Moon aboard a super-heavy rocket โ€˜Yenisei'.

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Chief Assignment Editor

Chief Assignment editor is Oleg Siziakov

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