Future plans to make the Moon available for tourism
Lunar tourism may be possible in the future if trips to the
Moon are made available to a private audience. Some
space tourism startup companies are planning to offer
tourism on or around the Moon, and estimate this to be possible sometime between 2023[1] and 2043.[2][3]
Note that these attractions are still conceptual projects that have yet to have been realized, as of November 2023.
Protection of lunar landmarks
The site of the first human landing on an
extraterrestrial body,
Tranquility Base, has been determined to have cultural and historic significance by the U.S. states of
California and
New Mexico, which have listed it on their
heritage registers, since their laws require only that listed sites have some association with the state. Despite the location of
Mission Control in Houston, Texas has not granted similar status to the site, as its
historic preservation laws limit such designations to properties located within the state.[9] The U.S.
National Park Service has declined to grant it
National Historic Landmark status, because the
Outer Space Treaty prohibits any nation from claiming sovereignty over any extraterrestrial body. It has not been proposed as a
World Heritage Site since the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), which oversees that program, limits nations to submitting sites within their own borders.[9] An organization called
For All Moonkind, Inc. is working to develop enforceable international protocols that will manage the protection and preservation of these and other human heritage sites in outer space.[10] For All Moonkind, Inc. will be basing their new convention on treaties such as UNESCO's World Heritage and
Underwater Cultural Heritage acts.[11] Until then, lunar tourism poses a veritable threat for heritage management, seeing as the most significant cultural sites, such as the
Apollo 11 landing sites and the footprints of
Aldrin and
Armstrong, rely on the preservation of the surface of the Moon as is.[12] Ideally, technologies would be developed which would allow tourists to hover over these sites without compromising the integrity of the lunar surface.[12]
Interest in affording historical
lunar landing sites some formal protection grew in the early 21st century with the announcement of the
Google Lunar X Prize for private corporations to successfully build spacecraft and reach the Moon; a $1 million bonus was offered for any competitor that visited a historic site on the Moon.[13] One team, led by
Astrobotic Technology, announced it would attempt to land a craft at Tranquility Base. Although it canceled those plans, the
ensuing controversy led NASA to request that any other missions to the Moon, private or governmental, human or robotic, keep a distance of at least 75 meters (246 ft) from the site.[9] A company called
PTScientists plans to return to the
Taurus-Littrow Valley, the site of the
Apollo 17 mission landing.
PTScientists is a partner of
For All Moonkind, Inc. and has pledged that its mission will honor heritage preservation and abide by all relevant guidelines.[14]
However, the only tourist flights to space that have been successfully executed so far have been
suborbital and
orbital flights.[15]
Suborbital flights are short and significantly less costly than orbital flights. Tourists on suborbital flights find themselves at an altitude of around 100 km, which is a little over the official beginning of space, where they get to experience zero gravity for approximately 5 minutes before beginning their descent back to Earth. Suborbital flights can last anywhere between 30 minutes and 3 hours and cost approximately $200,000 per passenger.[16]
Orbital flights, on the other hand, are longer, more expensive, and logistically harder to realize. They require flying hundreds of kilometres above the Earth's surface. Orbital flights typically last a day and cost around $10M per passenger.[17][16]
Both orbital and suborbital flights have only been executed in the context of space tourism, not moon tourism, but private companies have been making significant advancements in the realm of moon tourism. Notably, the entire development of
SpaceShipOne, a sub-orbital spaceplane, including its test flight, cost $25 million, a figure notably less than NASA's daily expenses.[18]
Initiatives have been announced for the commencement of commercial sub-orbital spaceline services between 2007 and 2009. The initial passenger price estimate stood at approximately $200,000, with potential price reductions of over 90% if demand rises significantly. According to a 2004 OECD report,[19] NASA's projections suggest that sub-orbital tourism could generate annual revenues ranging from $700 million to as much as $4 billion, representing a substantial increase compared to the 2003 commercial satellite launch market, which ranged from 100% to 600% of those figures.[18]
Various studies have estimated the development costs of orbital passenger launch vehicles to be in the range of a few billion US dollars to around $15 billion.[20][21][22]
Some of the space tourism start-up companies have declared their cost for each tourist for a tour to the Moon.
Circumlunar flyby:
Space Adventures is charging $150 million per seat, a price that includes months of ground-based training, although this is only a fly-by mission, and will not land on the Moon.[23]Excalibur Almaz had the same price tag but never managed to send their capsule to space.[24]
Lunar landing: The
Golden Spike Company charged $750 million per seat for future lunar landing tourism. The idea was for a module to be fired off into lunar orbit where it would await a crewed vehicle, linking up to it and allowing passengers to explore the lunar surface.[25][26][27]
The company
Space Adventures has announced a planned mission, titled
DSE-Alpha, to take two tourists within 100 kilometers (54 nautical miles) of the lunar surface, using a
Soyuz spacecraft piloted by a professional cosmonaut.[29] The trip would last around a week.[23]
In February 2017,
Elon Musk announced that substantial deposits from two individuals had been received by
SpaceX for a Moon loop flight using a
free return trajectory and that this could happen as soon as late 2018.[30] Musk said that the cost of the mission would be "comparable" to that of sending an astronaut to the International Space Station, about US$70 million in 2017.[31] In February 2018, Elon Musk announced the Falcon Heavy rocket would not be used for crewed missions.[32][33] The proposal changed in 2018 to use the
BFR system instead.[32][33][34] In September 2018,
Elon Musk revealed the passenger for the trip,
Yusaku Maezawa during a livestream. Yusaku Maezawa described the plan for his trip in further detail, dubbed the #
dearMoon project, intending to take 6–8 artists with him on the journey to inspire the artists to create new art.[35] In November 2023, the project announced that the mission has been postponed to an undecided date.[36]
Aerospace company
Blue Origin has already successfully accomplished multiple suborbital launches[37] and plans on continuing to use their New Shephard rocket for tourism purposes.[38] As of November 2023, technical failures have prevented the rocket from continuing its services but the company assures the public that it will resume operations in 2024.[39]
Cancelled proposals
Excalibur Almaz proposed to take three tourists in a flyby around the Moon, using modified
Almaz space station modules, in a low-energy trajectory flyby around the Moon. The trip would last around 6 months.[23] However, their equipment was never launched and is to be converted into an educational exhibit.[40]
The
Golden Spike Company was an American
space transport startup active from 2010 to 2013. The company held the objective to offer private commercial space transportation services to the
surface of the Moon. The company's website was quietly taken offline in September 2015.[41]
^
abSpennemann, Dirk H.R. (October 2007). "Extreme cultural tourism from Antarctica to the Moon". Annals of Tourism Research. 34 (4): 898–918.
doi:
10.1016/j.annals.2007.04.003 – via Elsevier Science Direct.
^Peeters, Walter; Jolly, Claire (12 May 2004).
Evaluation of Future Space Markets(PDF) (Report).
OECD. p. 43. SG/AU/SPA(2004)5.
Archived(PDF) from the original on 22 December 2023. Retrieved 8 November 2023.