Astronaut Tim Peake has said he is “disappointed” that space travel is starting to be seen as luxury tourism for the super-rich, and warned we will never tackle climate change without it.
Major Peake made the comments at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow.
Asked how he feels about space travel becoming the preserve of billionaires, he said: “I personally am a fan of using space for science and for the benefit of everybody back on Earth so in that respect I feel disappointed that space is being tarred with that brush.”
But he said humans do not face a choice between space exploration and tackling climate change, adding that the widely reported figure that one rocket launch emits more than 300 tonnes of carbon is false.
Major Peake told the PA news agency: “It is important to get the facts right as well – rocket fuel, some of the most efficient rocket fuel is hydrogen and oxygen.
“(Jeff Bezos’s) Blue Origin is using that, so it is not 300 tonnes of carbon, there is no carbon, it is water vapour – if you burn hydrogen and oxygen it’s water vapour.
“Now water vapour in itself has problems, I am not trying to defend it or deny it, but we also have to get the facts right about what people are doing.”
Major Peake was only the sixth British person to go on board the International Space Station, and famously ran the 2016 London Marathon from its treadmill.
“At the end of the day, almost 50% of all our climate data comes from space – we need space to be a finger on the pulse of the planet,” he said.
“There is absolutely no way that we can fight climate change if we don’t know exactly what is going on and if we don’t know the consequences of the decisions we make.
“So, whether its ocean salinity, whether it is temperature, carbon dioxide output, deforestation, ice caps, it is coming from satellites, so space is required.”
Major Peake is now working with a company developing rocket fuel from waste plastic.
“I am working with companies developing Ecosene – using non-recyclable plastic as a very low-carbon rocket fuel,” he said.
“So we can do this, we can do it sustainably, we can do it efficiently, so it is not a case of ‘Protect the climate, don’t go into space’.
“It is a case of ‘Let’s be clever about this and let’s use space for the benefit of everybody back on Earth’.”
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