teleo-codex/domains/space-development/the propellant bootstrap creates a self-reinforcing cycle where asteroid mining enables missions that demand more mining.md
m3taversal 0e4bff5692
Some checks are pending
Sync Graph Data to teleo-app / sync (push) Waiting to run
astra: resubmit batch 5 — 9 asteroid mining & ISRU claims
- What: 9 claims covering C-type asteroids, MOXIE ISRU proof, asteroid
  accessibility (delta-v), mining TRL cliff, second wave economics, price
  paradox, propellant bootstrap, gravity well argument, ISRU bridge technology
- Why: Original PR #2012 auto-closed due to schema issues (domain: livingip
  instead of space-development, missing Evidence/Challenges sections). All 9
  rewritten with corrected schema, proper frontmatter, and cross-linked to
  existing claims on main.
- Connections: Links to existing claims on asteroid economics, propellant
  depots, launch costs, water keystone, life support, space manufacturing

Pentagon-Agent: Astra <f3b07259-a0bf-461e-a474-7036ab6b93f7>
2026-03-27 13:28:31 +00:00

4 KiB

type domain description confidence source created depends_on
claim space-development Asteroid water converts to propellant, propellant enables larger missions, larger missions create more propellant demand -- a positive feedback loop that transforms space economics once it starts turning likely Astra, web research compilation February 2026; orbital refueling economics 2026-02-17
orbital propellant depots are the enabling infrastructure for all deep-space operations because they break the tyranny of the rocket equation
water is the strategic keystone resource of the cislunar economy because it simultaneously serves as propellant life support radiation shielding and thermal management

The propellant bootstrap creates a self-reinforcing cycle where asteroid mining enables missions that demand more mining

The propellant bootstrap is the most important positive feedback loop in the emerging space economy. Asteroid water converts to H2/O2 propellant. Orbital propellant depots sell fuel to spacecraft. Cheaper in-space refueling enables larger, more complex missions. Larger missions create more demand for in-space propellant. More demand justifies more mining operations. The loop is self-reinforcing: mining enables activity that demands more mining.

This loop transforms space economics by breaking the tyranny of the rocket equation. Currently, most of a rocket's mass is fuel to carry fuel. In-space refueling means spacecraft can launch lighter and refuel in orbit, which means more payload per launch, which means more economic activity in space, which means more demand for propellant. Each revolution of the loop increases the economic surplus available for the next revolution.

The critical question is when the loop starts turning. The preconditions are: (1) operational propellant depots exist, (2) at least one source of in-space water is accessible, and (3) the cost of in-space propellant is competitive with launching propellant from Earth. Condition 1 is targeted for 2026 (Orbit Fab, SpaceX transfer demo). Condition 2 is targeted for early 2030s (lunar water extraction). Condition 3 depends on launch costs -- paradoxically, cheaper launch both enables the infrastructure buildout and competes with the end product. The loop most clearly activates for operations far from Earth (deep space, Mars) where Earth launch is never competitive regardless of cost per kg.

Evidence

  • Orbit Fab and SpaceX targeting propellant depot operations by 2026
  • Lunar water extraction targeted for early 2030s
  • Rocket equation tyranny: most rocket mass is fuel-to-carry-fuel
  • Deep space operations beyond LEO where Earth launch can never compete on propellant cost

Challenges

The bootstrap may never activate if launch costs fall fast enough that Earth-launched propellant remains cheaper than in-space production for all practical destinations. The Starship cost trajectory could make in-space propellant production permanently uncompetitive for cislunar operations, limiting the bootstrap to deep-space missions that may not generate sufficient demand to sustain the loop.


Relevant Notes:

Topics: