“It’s a stepping stone,” he said. “For example, as we’re starting to move towards nuclear power, with the need for more and more energy here in the United States…There’s particles on the moon that they would bring back because they’re very scarce here in America and around the world.”
Helium-3 is a highly coveted resource found on the moon known to be key in nuclear fusion processes.
“From that point, you settle the moon, and then you go on to Mars, which has been, of course, Elon Musk’s vision,” Haridopolos said. “When he thought of things like SpaceX, it was, how do I get to Mars? And then how do you pay to get to Mars? That was the inspiration behind a lot of the new technologies he helped create. And now he’s got a fellow zillionaire in Jeff Bezos dreaming of the same type of things. It’s really exciting.”
In Congress, the first-term lawmaker represents part of the country that’s famous for being home to NASA’s Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
The Space Coast broke its all-time annual record with 93 orbital launches last year, according to Florida Today. Just this week it’s scheduled to host launches by both Musk’s SpaceX Falcon 9 and Bezos’ Blue Origin rocket.
He lauded both President-elect Trump’s vision for space as well as new House Space Science and Technology Chairman Brian Babin, R-Texas.
“Donald Trump has proven day-one and officially in 2019 that he loves space,” he said, referring to Trump’s creation of the Space Force. He suggested that the U.S. approach to the final frontier may not be dissimilar to the optimism and pride seen in 1969 when Americans landed a team of astronauts on the moon.
“It was an inspiration for my parents’ generation,” Haridopolos said. “Now, of course, Elon Musk gave us this whole new vision of landing potentially, in our lifetime, on Mars. It’s remarkable. And so the president said this is the future.”
The original article source: ‘Space coast’ congressman sets bold goal for American moon missions.