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Space is back! No longer the reserve of a couple of superpowers, an increasing number of countries are getting involved, and the private sector is playing a greater role than ever.
On this episode, NASA Chief Economist Alexander MacDonald talks about plans to return to the Moon, and Pascale Ehrenfreund, president of the Committee on Space Research, explains why we are looking for life on Mars and beyond, and what that might look like.
Co-hosted by Nikolai Khlystov, Lead, Space Technology, World Economic Forum
Links:Global Future Council on the Future of Space: https://www.weforum.org/communities/gfc-on-space/
Space: The $1.8 Trillion Opportunity for Global Economic Growth: https://www.weforum.org/publications/space-the-1-8-trillion-opportunity-for-global-economic-growth/
Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution: https://centres.weforum.org/centre-for-the-fourth-industrial-revolution/home
Related podcasts: Radio DavosLife on Mars and the birth of the universe: why space exploration is vital to humanity
Space - how advances up there can help life down here
How does Earth look from space? 'Like one big spaceship' - astronaut Matthias Maurer on Radio Davos
Meet the LeaderMeet the startup building the first commercial space station
This former astronaut shares what’s key to building strong, effective teams
What an astronaut can teach leaders about collaboration and aiming high
From space to the ocean's depths - how a space CEO and explorer approaches risk
European space chief on speaking to inspire - and making big change possible
Astra’s Chris Kemp: Thinking ‘mission first’ - and building a free space economy
All Forum podcasts:Check out all our podcasts on wef.ch/podcasts:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@wef
Radio Davos - subscribe: https://pod.link/1504682164
Meet the Leader - subscribe: https://pod.link/1534915560
Agenda Dialogues - subscribe: https://pod.link/1574956552
Join the World Economic Forum Podcast Club: https://www.facebook.com/groups/wefpodcastclub
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6363 ratings
Space is back! No longer the reserve of a couple of superpowers, an increasing number of countries are getting involved, and the private sector is playing a greater role than ever.
On this episode, NASA Chief Economist Alexander MacDonald talks about plans to return to the Moon, and Pascale Ehrenfreund, president of the Committee on Space Research, explains why we are looking for life on Mars and beyond, and what that might look like.
Co-hosted by Nikolai Khlystov, Lead, Space Technology, World Economic Forum
Links:Global Future Council on the Future of Space: https://www.weforum.org/communities/gfc-on-space/
Space: The $1.8 Trillion Opportunity for Global Economic Growth: https://www.weforum.org/publications/space-the-1-8-trillion-opportunity-for-global-economic-growth/
Centre for the Fourth Industrial Revolution: https://centres.weforum.org/centre-for-the-fourth-industrial-revolution/home
Related podcasts: Radio DavosLife on Mars and the birth of the universe: why space exploration is vital to humanity
Space - how advances up there can help life down here
How does Earth look from space? 'Like one big spaceship' - astronaut Matthias Maurer on Radio Davos
Meet the LeaderMeet the startup building the first commercial space station
This former astronaut shares what’s key to building strong, effective teams
What an astronaut can teach leaders about collaboration and aiming high
From space to the ocean's depths - how a space CEO and explorer approaches risk
European space chief on speaking to inspire - and making big change possible
Astra’s Chris Kemp: Thinking ‘mission first’ - and building a free space economy
All Forum podcasts:Check out all our podcasts on wef.ch/podcasts:
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@wef
Radio Davos - subscribe: https://pod.link/1504682164
Meet the Leader - subscribe: https://pod.link/1534915560
Agenda Dialogues - subscribe: https://pod.link/1574956552
Join the World Economic Forum Podcast Club: https://www.facebook.com/groups/wefpodcastclub
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