Ethics: Five questions we need to answer before colonising Mars

Published October 9, 2016
A member of Crew 125 EuroMoonMars B mission stands clad in a spacesuit and helmet in the middle of a barren, red landscape in the Utah desert. He is a participant in a project at the Mars Desert Research Station that stimulates living conditions on the Red Planet - Photo by Reuters
A member of Crew 125 EuroMoonMars B mission stands clad in a spacesuit and helmet in the middle of a barren, red landscape in the Utah desert. He is a participant in a project at the Mars Desert Research Station that stimulates living conditions on the Red Planet - Photo by Reuters

For all the attention paid to billionaire Elon Musk’s recent announcement that he hopes to get humans to Mars as early as 2024, the early news stories about his efforts focused mostly on the logistics of the effort, including funding, and the fact that the first pioneers to the Red Planet will probably die there. That’s not to say that these are unimportant issues: there’s no point to thinking about what life on Mars might be like if we can never actually get there or viably inhabit the planet.

But if Musk envisions Mars and other planets as a potential escape hatch for humanity, it’s worth thinking about what kind of society we might build as we spread out into the universe. And fiction like Kim Stanley Robinson’s Mars trilogy and the Expanse series pose some important questions we all might want to consider.


There’s a race to get to the Red Planet but what kind of society do we want there?


  1. Who will govern Mars? In Robinson’s novels, the first effort to colonise Mars is a public-private partnership, with a team of 100 colonists carefully balanced from among the sponsoring countries. Ostensibly they’re supposed to report back to governments and international organisations on Earth. But as soon as they get underway, this becomes a vexed issue.

Should the new Martians, who may never return home and who are assuming enormous risk, be able to govern themselves? Will huge multinational corporations flying flags of convenience effectively take over and strip-mine the planet? If Americans set up settlements on Mars, will they be admitted to the union like states? If we don’t settle these questions before humans set foot on Mars, we could be set up for ugly conflicts over sovereignty and independence.

  1. How much will we change the planet’s atmosphere and surface? Getting to Mars is a sufficiently big challenge. But how will we live when we get there? Will we live in underground settlements that provide us with some protection from radiation? Or will we begin to terraform the planet, changing the atmosphere so that it’s breathable and thick enough to make it safe to walk on the surface? How will these choices affect questions of governance?

Robinson’s fictional colonists eventually come to realise that without a breathable atmosphere, they’ll be vulnerable to all sorts of manipulation from Earth, and that sabotage to habitats could become a powerful weapon of terror. But they also debate whether, having messed up one planet, humans have the right to bend another world to their needs.

  1. Who will go? If tickets to Mars are going to start at 500,000 dollars, clearly some of the people who decide to go to Mars will be very rich. But in order to set up functional societies, we’ll have to get all sorts of workers with different kinds of technical expertise there.

So will Mars become a hardship posting, like an oil rig? Or a luxury destination that the hyper-rich use to escape a decaying planet Earth? And what happens if the people who helped build that escape hatch are shut outside once it’s complete? Mars could help humanity expand and survive disasters on our home world. But it could also open up new opportunities for even more dramatic social stratification.

  1. How will Martian and interplanetary economies function? Bitcoin? Blocks of minerals? Oxygen tanks? How will events on Mars affect the economy on Earth? Mars is going to be expensive to get to, and people are going to want to make money off the planet once they get there, a want that will be intimately connected to the third question on this list.

  2. How will human society change if it expands to new planets? This is somewhat theoretical, of course: We can’t know who we’ll become until we get there, and until generations have passed. But the Expanse books capture increasing human variation, including people who were born in the Asteroid belt and whose physiques mean they couldn’t function on Earth.

Both the Expanse and Mars series look at how religion might function in outer space; in the former, Mormons have done incredibly well and are preparing to leave the solar system to spread their faith, while in the latter, Muslim communities begin traversing Martian deserts, governing their convoys in accordance with religious law.

Thinking about who we are, what we might want to be and how new environments will shape our customs and traditions is a fascinating experiment, and an important one.

—By arrangement with The Washington Post

Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, October 9th, 2016

Opinion

Editorial

A breakthrough?
07 May, 2026

A breakthrough?

The whole world would welcome an end to this pointless war.
Missed opportunity
07 May, 2026

Missed opportunity

A BIG opportunity to industrialise Pakistan has just passed us by. This has been reconfirmed by the investment...
Punishing dissent
07 May, 2026

Punishing dissent

THE Sindh government’s treatment of the Aurat March this week was a disgraceful assault on democratic rights. What...
The May war
Updated 06 May, 2026

The May war

Rationality demands that both states come to the table and discuss their grievances, and their solutions in a mature manner.
Looking inwards
06 May, 2026

Looking inwards

REGULAR appraisals by human rights groups and activists should not be treated by the authorities as attempts to ...
Feeling the heat
06 May, 2026

Feeling the heat

ANOTHER heatwave season has begun, and once again, the state is scrambling to respond to conditions it has long been...