Elon Musk's Mars Colonization Plan Now Includes Intercity Rocket Travel

Musk today updated his grand plan to save humanity by moving it to Mars.
Elon Musk speaks below a computer generated illustration of his new rocket.
Elon Musk speaks below a computer generated illustration of his new rocket.PETER PARKS/AFP/GETTY

Elon Musk still wants to colonize Mars—and he's willing to sacrifice SpaceX's existing fleet of spacecraft to do it.

Musk revised his plan to transport people to the red planet today in Adelaide, at the International Astronautical Congress, nine years to the day since SpaceX's first successful rocket launch. At the center of that plan is an updated version of the company's Interplanetary Transport System (codenamed BFR, for Big Fucking Rocket). Funding it, Musk says, will require "cannibalizing" the rest of SpaceX's products.

The new BFR is smaller than the interplanetary launch vehicle Musk described at last year's IAC, but could have applications beyond interplanetary travel. Musk says the updated rocket, which can still carry up to 100 passengers, could also be used to establish a moon base. Oh, and also: Shuttle people between any two points on Earth in under an hour:

The company plans to fill the first two BFRs with equipment and materials to build a fuel-processing facility on the planet’s surface. Musk says SpaceX will also try to identify possible water sources and catalogue potential hazards during the first mission. At least 26 months later, when the Hohmann transfer window reopens allowing the shortest distance of travel between Earth and Mars, SpaceX hopes to launch four more of its interplanetary spacecraft—with two of them carrying passengers. The goals of this mission will be to bring more essential cargo to Mars and to begin building facilities to produce and store fuel, refine water, and grow plants.

Will the first human mission to Mars happen in 2024? Probably not. Even Musk admits the timeframe is something to aspire to. Preparing the spaceship for its interplanetary journey, alone, will be a tedious and exacting process. The BFR will need to not only park the spacecraft in orbit, but make multiple trips to and from Earth's surface to fill its fuel tanks. This makes precision rocket return, automatic docking, and refueling the most critical features of the BFR, according to Musk.

The trip to Mars could last anywhere between three and six months. Musk says the spacecraft's 40 cabins will each hold 3 passengers comfortably, but accommodate as many as 6 apiece. In order to get the passenger ship back in Martian orbit for a return trip, the BFR requires no booster due to the planet’s lack of atmosphere. All the ship needs is a full tank of oxygen and methane produced by the fuel processing facilities constructed by SpaceX.

The more immediate challenge? Demonstrating safety. Talking about building and colonizing a city on another planet is one thing, but the reality is SpaceX has yet to launch a single human anywhere, let alone send a spacecraft beyond low-Earth orbit. Musk will need to execute the next several steps in his timeline as flawlessly as possible. The company has already suffered two fiery losses that have set them back in development, and another could cast serious doubts on SpaceX’s ability to safely transport humans anywhere—especially to another world.