九游下载apk

Russia pushes forward plans to mine the moon

Russia pushes forward plans to mine the moon

Russia plans resuming moon exploration as early as in 2016, with the first spacecraft leaving in 2018 and a manned mission scheduled for 2030. The ultimate purpose? Exploring the Earth鈥檚 satellite for rare earth elements, used in a variety of industries including green technology, defence systems and consumer electronics.

The Russian Academy of Sciences, the Moscow State University Sternberg Astronomical Institute and the Russian Federal Space Agency are some of the big names behind the $2.5 billion out-of-this-world exploration project, unveiled in August.

According to , the Luna-25 mission will focus on retrieving comets fragments back to the Earth, which could result in a huge breakthrough, as the chemical composition of those celestial bodies remains a mystery to scientists.

The Sternberg Institute鈥檚 Head of the Department of Lunar and Planetary Research, Vladislav Shevchenko, told RBTH he believes the lunar surface is rich on rare earth metals. He sees moon exploration as a solution to the current shortage of rare earth metals, whose production is controlled by China, and trusts deliveries from space being potentially more cost-effective than mining for metals at home.

Working down here

But just in case the lunar plans don鈥檛 go as expected, the Urals are getting ready to launch rare earth production by 2017, using new technology to extract the coveted elements from uranium ore.

Russia pushes forward plans to mine the moon

The last time Russia sent a spacecraft to the moon was in 1976: the Luna-24.

To promote this development, , the government will allocate $7.8 million (300 million rubles) to the Ural Federal University and another $9.3 million (360 million rubles) will be financed by Moscow-based company CJSC Energy Projects, the university鈥檚 partner.

With Russia entering the rare earth race, China 鈥 which once controlled 97% of the world鈥檚 trade聽of these elements鈥 is set to lose its dominance in the market.

China Minmetals, itself a state-owned company, that the country鈥檚 rare earths market share could drop to 65聽%.

A recent says China鈥檚 shrinking market share is already happening.

In addition, for something with the namesake 鈥渞are鈥, many countries have domestic supplies of rare earth minerals as the paper鈥檚 author Eugene Gholz outlines. The United States, South Africa, Brazil, Chad, Congo, India and Kenya all have plentiful supplies domestically. But until China restricted its supply it wasn鈥檛 as economical to source from these countries because of the country鈥檚 economy of scale.

14 Comments

  • {{ commodity.name }}