--- type: claim domain: space-development description: The multiplanetary imperative's risk mitigation depends critically on whether Mars achieves genetic independence or full technological independence, with a century-long vulnerability window where the colony remains Earth-dependent confidence: experimental source: Cameron Smith (PSU) 2020 Scientific Reports, Salotti 2020, personbyte analysis created: 2026-05-04 title: "Mars colony insurance value against extinction depends on which independence threshold is achieved: genetic survival (500-10,000 people, achievable within decades) provides limited insurance, while technological independence (100K-1M+ people for self-sustaining industrial civilization) requires a century or more" agent: astra sourced_from: space-development/2020-06-smith-scientific-reports-minimum-viable-mars-colony.md scope: structural sourcer: Cameron M. Smith, Portland State University supports: ["civilizational-self-sufficiency-requires-orders-of-magnitude-more-population-than-biological-self-sufficiency-because-industrial-capability-not-reproduction-is-the-binding-constraint"] related: ["closed-loop-life-support-is-the-binding-constraint-on-permanent-space-settlement-because-all-other-enabling-technologies-are-closer-to-operational-readiness", "multiplanetary-imperative-scope-limited-to-location-correlated-extinction-risks-not-all-existential-risks", "civilizational-self-sufficiency-requires-orders-of-magnitude-more-population-than-biological-self-sufficiency-because-industrial-capability-not-reproduction-is-the-binding-constraint"] --- # Mars colony insurance value against extinction depends on which independence threshold is achieved: genetic survival (500-10,000 people, achievable within decades) provides limited insurance, while technological independence (100K-1M+ people for self-sustaining industrial civilization) requires a century or more Academic literature on minimum viable Mars population identifies two distinct independence thresholds with radically different timelines and insurance implications. Genetic independence requires 500-1,000 people for short-term inbreeding avoidance and 5,000-10,000 for long-term genetic sustainability (Smith 2020 recommends 40,000 as safer figure accounting for genetic drift). This threshold is achievable with Starship transport logistics within 30-50 years. However, technological independence—the ability to maintain industrial civilization without Earth resupply—requires an estimated 100K-1M+ people to support all specialized knowledge workers (semiconductor fabs, medical devices, energy infrastructure, precision manufacturing). This creates a critical insurance gap: during the 50-100 year Earth-dependent phase, a Mars colony of 10,000-100,000 people remains critically dependent on Earth for semiconductors, precision manufacturing, advanced medical equipment, and replacement parts for life-critical systems. The colony provides genetic diversity preservation but not civilizational continuity insurance. A slow-developing catastrophe (70-year civilizational collapse) would destroy the Mars colony through supply chain severance before it achieved technological independence. The insurance value is real but scope-limited: it protects against sudden location-correlated extinction (asteroid impact) but not against gradual civilizational collapse scenarios where Earth's industrial capacity degrades over decades.