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September 25, 2005: Colonizing the Moon - Chip Proser

September 25, 2005: Colonizing the Moon - Chip Proser

The Art Bell Archive · Arthur William Bell III

December 6, 20252h 29m

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Show Notes

Art Bell opens with updates on Hurricane Rita's aftermath and his relief at hearing from lifelong friend Lynn Whitlake, whose Lake Charles home suffered a massive oak tree crashing into the garage. Art discusses the shooting of stray animals in New Orleans, melting Siberian permafrost releasing methane, and the Antarctic ozone hole approaching record size. He stresses that the lesson of Katrina is that people can depend only on themselves in a crisis.

Filmmaker Chip Proser joins to discuss his documentary Gaia Selene, arguing that space exploration is essential to human survival. He explains that Earth uses 12 terawatts of power annually but will need 30 by 2050, and that all terrestrial technologies combined cannot meet that demand. Proser describes helium-3 on the lunar surface as fuel for clean fusion reactors producing only water as waste, noting that 25 tons could power the entire United States for a year.

The conversation covers lunar solar power stations built from moon regolith, the carbon nanotube space elevator that could reduce launch costs from ten thousand dollars per kilogram to roughly one hundred, and natural lava tubes that could shelter colonists. Proser argues the moon offers humanity its best path to energy independence.