• Polaris
  • Posts
  • Invest in the future (9/19/23)

Invest in the future (9/19/23)

Happy Tuesday. I’m super excited to be participating in The Economist's first Space Economy Summit, where I’ll be moderating a panel on ASAT test bans. The event—which is focused on using space to maximize returns to Earth—is intended for a mainstream industry audience who can benefit from engaging with space (so, everyone).

The event, which will be held Oct. 11-12 in LA + virtually, has already announced an impressive slate of speakers, including: Rocket Lab CEO Peter Beck, Deputy Commerce Secretary Don Graves, Voyager Space CEO Dylan Taylor, NASA JPL director Laurie Leshin, XPRIZE Foundation founder Peter Diamandis, and NASA astronaut Mark Vande Hei, plus many more. Register here.

Did someone forward you this email? Subscribe to Polaris here.

School is in Session

Planetary Society members on Capitol Hill during the 2023 Day of Action. Image: Planetary Society

Joseph Diggs, a science teacher in Anne Arundel county, MD, was doing a different kind of educating (and in a much grander classroom) on Monday.

Diggs was one of 130+ people who traveled to DC for the Planetary Society’s Day of Action, during which people lobby their representatives to support scientific exploration of the cosmos. Though the Planetary Society provides training and talking points, participants take PTO and pay their own way because of a deep-rooted belief in the importance of planetary science.

“Whenever we talk about space, my students light up, even the quiet ones,” Diggs told me when I spent the morning embedded with Planetary Society members making office calls on Capitol Hill. “I’m here on behalf of them.”

Day of Action 101: This year’s 130+ participants from 31 states is the largest day of action for the society, said Jack Kiraly, director of government relations for the Planetary Society. It’s also the first time the group was able to host the lobbying blitz in person since February 2020.

Kiraly acknowledged that fiscal 2024 is a critical year for NASA’s planetary science goals, since budget caps imposed as part of the debt limit deal reached earlier this year have put many programs potentially on the chopping block, such as:

  • Mars Sample Return, which would allow samples of the Red Planet to be studied on Earth

  • The Dragonfly mission to search for signs of life on Saturn’s moon, Titan

  • The VERITAS and DAVINCI missions, which would both study Venus

“We’re making sure that space science is part of the conversation about the FY24 budget,” Kiraly said. “It doesn’t look great in the Senate report language for NASA’s science missions, so we want to make sure those things are being championed on the Hill.”

Fly on the wall: Mars Sample Return, which was slashed in the Senate’s proposed NASA budget, was top of mind for both Planetary Society members and staffers. In a meeting with the office of Sen. Ben Cardin (D-MD), one of the first comments from a staffer was about the projected cost of the mission skyrocketing to be dramatically over budget.

But the citizen lobbyists had many retorts for that. Apollo was over budget too, one argued, and look what that accomplished. It’s money well spent for the expected long-term scientific return. And the funding couldn’t be pushed to a future year, or else existing missions on Mars that make up the first step of the multi-step process mission would expire.

“It’s an investment in the future,” one Planetary Society member quipped.

A difference maker: Rich Myers, who works on the JWST program with Northrop Grumman in DC, said he’s been a Planetary Society member for a decade and keeps coming back because he sees programs he’s pitched to lawmakers actually be included in budgets.

“I think it actually makes a difference,” he said. “That’s really how you get things done, right? You have to come out here and you have to give your opinion on what’s important to you, and hopefully that gets enacted in law.”

130+ people participated this year. Image: Planetary Society

Library of Cosmos

  • AIAA released a white paper last week laying out a plan for space to be treated like other infrastructure (via Payload).

  • Federal agencies denied Varda’s request to bring its in-space manufacturing capsule back to Earth (via Payload).

  • The Pentagon released a new plan for protecting assets in orbit (via Payload).

  • DLA Piper became the latest big law firm to jump into the space race.

  • Audrey Schaffer, former NSC space policy director, has landed at Slingshot Aerospace as the VP of strategy and policy.

Tweet of the week