Costs of an International Lunar Base | Center for Strategic and International Studies
Costs of an International Lunar Base
Following the celebration of the 40th anniversary of the Apollo 11 moon
landing, a presidentially appointed committee is preparing its final
report reviewing U.S. plans for future space exploration. In its summary
report, the commission has suggested an exploration option that drops
the goal of returning to the moon and building a base there, something
that has been a centerpiece of U.S. exploration plans for the past five
years or more. The suggestion to drop a return to the moon is based in
large part on budget projections that forecast just how much and how
long it will take the United States to carry out its space exploration
plans on its own. These scenarios do not factor in international
collaboration. The development of a lunar base has been identified by
the Beijing Declaration as the ideal next project for international
collaboration on space exploration. CSIS Space Initiatives has made an
estimate, based on available literature, that the likely costs of
developing such a base would be about $35 billion, and operating the
base would run about $7.35 billion per year. By comparison, the
development cost for all but the Russian section of the International
Space Station (ISS) is estimated at around $85 billion, including $35
billion for Space Shuttle missions. In the years after the Shuttle
retires, the annual operation costs of the ISS will be $4.5 billion per
year.1 The estimated operating costs for the lunar base assume no
in-situ resource utilization. All supplies (O2, H2, food, etc.) would be
supplied from Earth and recycled to the maximum extent possible. If
useable water ice is found near the base, or oxygen-rich minerals can be
utilized, operating costs will decrease significantly.
Development of the Base
Development of the lunar base is estimated at $35 billion for a base
that can host a four-person crew and remain unmanned between missions.
Our estimates for both development and operation of the lunar base
assume that it is located at the south pole. This location offers areas
of scientific interest—for example, craters with possible water ice
deposits—and quasi-permanent sun exposure, as well as the most
conservative assessment for transportation to the lunar surface. The
costs do not include development of the heavy-lift Ares V or the Orion
crew capsule. Although an Ares V or equivalent will be needed to
transfer the lunar base from Earth to the Moon, it is capable of other
exploration and scientific missions, including deploying
third-generation space telescopes, robotic and human missions to
near-Earth objects, as well as missions to the Lagrange Points and
eventually to Mars. It will serve as the workhorse for the future
exploration of the solar system and beyond. The four-person crew
capsule, Orion, is developed for the Moon but will first be used to
transport crew to the ISS in replacement of the Space Shuttle.
Therefore, Orion development costs are not included in the lunar base
project. However, a margin of $2 billion is calculated to account for
unforeseen technological and budgetary problems. The development costs
of the Altair lander flying aboard the Ares V or an equivalent,
estimated to be about $12 billion, are part of the lunar base project.
Furthermore, a universal lander, needed to deliver cargo to the lunar
base using the medium launchers, has estimated development costs of $2
billion.
Although these cost estimates include some margins, NASA projects have
typically run 50 percent over budget, according to recent estimates.
With a goal of a first landing on the Moon 10 years from now, at the
50th anniversary of Apollo 11, the development costs for the lunar base
would average $3.5 billion per year, the equivalent of what is currently
spent operating the Shuttle. The lunar base by itself is quite
affordable; however, significant funding will also be needed during this
time for the transformation to a post-Shuttle launch system and
utilization of the ISS until 2020.
Operating Costs
Operating costs for the lunar base are estimated at about $7.35 billion
per year, assuming year-round occupancy. Designing the lunar base to be
left uninhabited between missions would offer the possibility of fewer
or shorter missions and therefore reduced annual costs. In support of
the lunar project, there will be three to four international
medium-launch systems, for example Ares I, Ariane 5, Delta IV Heavy,
Long March 5, and the H-IIC. These launchers will be interoperable to
launch cargo to the lunar south pole and a four-person Orion capsule to
low Earth orbit. Once in orbit, that capsule will meet up with the Earth
Departure Stage and Altair lunar lander, which are launched by Ares V
or an equivalent. Operating costs are based on two four-person crew
rotations per year. The two Orion launches are estimated at $0.6 billion
per year, with the corresponding Ares V launches costing $2 billion per
year. Cargo needs are estimated at 17.6 metric tons (mt) per year—that
is, 2.2 mt of supplies per person for a 180-day mission. An estimated 15
cargo launches (1.2 mt of cargo with a 0.5-mt lander) will be needed
per year, at an annual cost of $3.75 billion.
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