Bill Nye on NASA, Space Exploration, and Mars | Big Think
Bill Nye: Well, talking some more about me, I'm the CEO of The Planetary Society, so what I have encouraged the staff to do is focus on our mission. Our mission is exploring the planets, to know the cosmos and our place within it, empowering citizens of the world to be space explorers.
So by focusing on your core mission, I think it will enable us to work together to make the world better. Now, when it comes to NASA, we are very hopeful is that we will acknowledge that NASA is a fantastic envoy—or it's a fantastic brand for the United States. People everywhere, no matter how they feel about the United States, respect what NASA is able to accomplish.
First of all, when it comes to exploring Mars, which is what we all want to do and everybody talks about all the time, let's not have a reset; let's not cancel existing programs for the sake of some imagined or proposed new program. Let's finish the Space Launch System, let's finish Orion, let's enable the Falcon Heavy to be built and fly this rocket from SpaceX. If United Launch Alliance wants to build the Vulcan, let's enable that.
Let's do everything all at once in human spaceflight and stay focused on getting to Mars by setting a date. One of my favorite blues songs is “Set A Date,” and he's talking about, I believe, getting married. But if we set a date for when we would be on Mars, we would be much more likely to achieve it than to continually suggest decades from now.
As you may know, the Planetary Society did an analysis that shows we could be in orbit around Mars, which would be analogous to the Apollo 8 orbit of the moon in 2033 without changing anything about the NASA budget—just adjusting it for inflation. But if people got excited and wanted to go a couple orbits early in 2028, that would be fantastic.
That's for one thing. The other thing that we at the Planetary Society very much want NASA to stay focused on are these extraordinary planetary missions. We have Juno in orbit around Jupiter, we have Curiosity and Opportunity still roving on Mars. We have many spacecraft in orbit around Mars. We have New Horizons; data is still coming back from—I guess it just finished bringing data back from Pluto—and now it's onto the next destination in deep space in 2019.
Keep those missions going because that's where new things happen, where these innovations happen in technology. A very strong argument can be made that we would not have this conversation electronically on the Internet without the U.S. space program, which led to the development of the Internet and so on.
So acknowledge that NASA is a great international brand as well as a source of national pride and technological achievement. And I will say to the fossil fuel industries, if you're out there, think about making your mission energy production rather than fossil fuel extraction and burning.
I mentioned this to executives at Exxon before it was Exxon Mobile many times back in the 1990s when I was working with you all, that if you were an energy company rather than a fossil fuel extraction company, you could be part of the future instead of part of the past. Everybody understands, no matter what you may think about the energy needs of the United States right now, the future is not going to be coal and oil; it's just not going to be.
Look at it this way: other countries are not going to buy products made with fossil fuels in the future; they're going to put essentially a tax on it, a tariff, and the longer we stay the fossil fuel course, the more likely we are to run aground. There's a little nautical metaphor for you. But there's just no future in it.
I love you all, but there's no future in it. So appreciate the space program's place in the world, both for technological achievement and for statesmanship. And working together, we can provide renewable clean electricity for everyone on Earth if we just get to work. Let's go.