The idea of space-based solar power was the brainchild of Dr. Peter Glaser in 1968. The U.S. studied the idea in the 1970s; but, didn't follow through after 1980 (There's a long story there gang, and I'll deal with it at length sometime.). Japan, Russia and Europe have all spent time studying the idea. Japan originally wanted a Solar Power Satellite (SPS) in orbit by 2000; obviously the target date has slipped.
Caraher is right about the prohibitive cost and environmental impact of launching materials from the surface of the Earth. There are three ways of getting around this:
1) Using lunar or asteroid materials, as Gerard K. O'Neill proposed. By the way Caraher, the large space settlements are not necessary to use lunar or asteroid materials, most of the work done by O'Neill and
The Space Studies Institute since the early 80's has been directed at bringing down the cost of space manufacturing by 'bootstrapping,' i.e. starting with a small, most automated space factory and expanding your facility with mostly space-based materials.
Some thoughts on this: When I read that the Obama space plan was looking at multiple targets for manned exploration, including asteroids, I went hmmmm! There was a debate in the pro-space movement, including the old
L-5 Society about the advantages of lunar vs. asteroid materials. I wonder if someone in the administration is thinking about asteroids as a resource.
2) The use of
laser or other beamed power propulsion to launch bulk materials for SPS construction, an idea that's been studied since the early 70's.
3)
Space Elevators: The concept described by Russian Yuri Artsutanov in 1960 and featured in Arthur C. Clarke's
Fountains of Paradise and
The Mars Trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson. The discovery of carbon nanotubes (buckytubes, buckminsterfullerenes) in 1990 put the concept into the realm of possibility.
NASA has put some money into the idea and asked for idea from the private sector. NASA even sponsored a series of
Space Elevator Games in which teams competed to see who could build a robot, beamed power climber to climb a 1-KM cable suspended from a helicopter. Kansas City even had its own team:
The Kansas City Space Pirates, until they had to drop out when their laser provider withdrew.
For more information on space elevators go to
The Spaceward Foundation website. They have a
YouTube channel with videos of past competitions and some videos explaining the space elevator concept.
So, some combination of space resources and/or beamed power propulsion and/or space elevators will make solar power satellites feasible. The bad news is, there isn't any serious commitment to the concept in the United States at present, so it's more likely that Japan or China will put up the first SPS.
I promise to do a longer post on the themes I touched on today. Right now, I need to get ready for a State of the Union Watch Party tonight.