Space race, space law and future life in space - Docu

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[Music] people have always been fascinated by outer space curious about the stars planets and extraterrestrial life the centuries space has remained a great mystery and a source of outlandish stories from green Martians too deadly meteorites slowly but surely however science is giving us more and more real knowledge thanks to satellites space flights and moon landings it's not science fiction anymore what we're doing absolutely will change humanity there is not a doubt in my mind entering space has become a reality with all that it entails because who owns space music oh is that here Cowboys cat did I do not Sevilla and our culture also for mark and almost lights but your political victory over K this is backlight welcome to the infinite universe [Applause] [Music] almost fifty years ago the United States was the first country to send a manned space mission to the moon providing his own legendary commentary Neil Armstrong became the first man to set foot on the moon the man likeness and Dusty's today that he up shown desire lepak on the reveal the world law that would foresee near inside [Music] still for many years that one small step remained the only one but on November the 25th this year President Obama signed a new law the u.s. commercial space launch competitiveness Act also known as the Space Act with this law the next step has finally been taken with far-reaching consequences from now on it will be possible for American companies to mine raw materials in space the ink is still wet but the space race can finally begin so our company is involved in asteroid exploration and utilization so what does that mean it's it's basically searching for and capturing and then utilizing asteroids for the raw materials of asteroids because from that raw material that you get from asteroids you can pretty much build anything you need in space for human expansion in space there's a confluence of of capability and knowledge that has occurred in the past ten years that has moved asteroid mining from science fiction to something that is very real and very possible and so the first one is the cost of technology we've gotten the price down on these satellites very very low but the other part of the knowledge knowing where these asteroids are so in the past 20 years you know we now know where hundreds of thousands of objects are in our solar system and so the technology combined with the knowledge makes this something that we can actually do now thanks to technological developments space travel is increasingly becoming cheaper and safer but how do you prevent outer space from becoming the new Wild West with the Cowboys paying no heed to laws and regulations [Music] this is France Vonda dunk the sheriff of outer space he is one of the few people on earth specialized in space law and do you know off the top of your head where I'm going where our meeting is it's this base arbitration lost in space is the name of the session the rest of the world still seems unaware of the space act France Vonda Duke takes us along on his journey around the world he gets invited everywhere to explain what this new law entails with him we go back in time two months to the moment when the Space Act was announced in America and finally our third speaker is Professor dr. franz von der Donck he holds the Harvey and Susan pearlman alumni and automotive space law at Lincoln University in Nebraska he not only brings an academic perspective but has his own business in space law consulting black holes Franz has also been advisor to national governments intergovernmental organizations relating to space law and he's published hundreds of works on space law but the one that I particularly noticed was a list of the top 40 songs about space so if you don't have any questions at the end we'll be guessing what song was number one on that list so friends we'll be speaking about the potential for conflicts arising in some new developments in the u.s. on to this Space Act from a perspective of a professor we should realize that originally outer space was all about States it was just as a matter of fact about a few states over the last decades we see many more states becoming involved so a wide variety of states now suddenly get into space one way or another and then in addition of course we have now the growing involvement of private enterprise and this is of course in particular relevant for issues like arbitration we see Virgin Galactic and X Corps developing private suborbital flights we see orbital private spaceflight companies like SpaceX and Boeing and orbital sciences and then there is this fascinating idea of celestial bodies resources - space mine as the common parlor wants to have it okay with that I'm now going to move to this famous US Space Act so the Space Act does a lot of things but one chapter addresses this future element of space mining which is about to take off there are actually two companies Planetary Resources and deep space which are ready to start investing or whose investors are starting to invest but they want to be given some legal certainty as to the rights to the minerals with the Space Act America is making its own space industry possible the question is what the consequences will be for the rest of the world because all the other countries are running behind as it stands at the moment it's the only national act in the world right now which addresses this issue in any particular detail I want to leave it at that to allow some time for discussion thank you very much you list the homeland in the in the ratified Meister after the barricade I say cast hearts on the only activated haven of the Internationale afford Iraq Emmett Nam and identified to the techniques on trickling is fact Mulligan to fish-belly vodka countless positio crowd and I said our time today cannot lead Helen Lauper vacant 24 dragged easy in the sister and save the Irene Vienna Oprah's tell the United Nations treaties and principles on outer space the same opposite Elton and I taught Elaine start and a half ago gorilla man how you've all start Cooper meteor or mean that I'm defied active desire and this is in the food rock Helmick awakening home at the moral guide of knowledge Lake Nakuru madhumatl height of parte Quirin dock in Tucson Sullivan see the Outer Space Treaty the one the the United States is obligated by including a hundred plus other nations the Outer Space Treaty doesn't explicitly prohibit asteroid resource utilization by commercial company but it doesn't necessarily I explicitly allow it either so but the at the Outer Space Treaty does require the states that are part of the out-of-state treaty to create their own national legislation regarding regarding the use of outer space that's what the United States is doing right now when the treaties were written there was a very long discussion about mining in space and you if you if you want to go back to the time that they were writing these treaties this was the early 60s the space race was on there was a race to get to the moon people thought that within 10 or 15 years we would be living on the moon that we would be mining these things and so they wrote the treaties in such a way that we could pull resources off and use those resources and so those hooks were put into the treaties and now through the u.s. legislation that is being promoted by our members of Congress it makes it very explicit that US companies can indeed do that and own that property what you teach me goes back to I me when I when I learned space law we all learned about section 1 of the nineteen sixty seventy one the Space Treaty the common heritage of mankind how does this unilateral u.s. initiative cope with that and what could be brought from the maritime industry which has done something on the metal mining that's a very good question even the Moon agreement only specifies that you cannot appropriate mineral resources in place which means that once you get them out of there they are yours basically like if you go out in the high seas as a Fisher company you cannot say this the fish in this 100 square kilometers is mine but as soon as you go there and you fish in accordance with international rules overfishing and stuff like that as soon as the fish is in your net it's yours and that argument I think applies to outer space as well what the law provides is clarity and assurance and that clarity is that yes you own those resources and assurance to the investors that are putting money in there that that the government will protect my investment it the government is backing the fact that I can do this we we spent a significant amount of time with legal experts who have said yes what you're doing is perfectly legal you there could be issues of dispute though I mean especially in the United States you can get sued for crossing the street and what our investors said is you know that we don't want our money wasted in courtrooms we want our money used in space and on asteroids and thankfully for what our Congress has done is made sure and then they're working to make sure that our investors money is spent on something that is going to change humanity and is not going to be used and have you know pain for lawyers in a corporate Zen starter and Formica experi be a little photon accountant in Hollister it's hard for the two part law and uni not at all each hire a lot actually international career I met at last Bennigan's variants my actual character flaw Cynthia Denise need her looked on with international today any come over for Stella daughter McGann a new geography my mood each song haven't even powerful ability daily basis a non-cash here is almost she requested source common arbitrage driven our hearts break as the as they any pertain how many cancer now accounts with life is a long one we can select fault and this also divert havens their absorber hoop and on the Portage's three Americans were having a kanima in a moment that's that's that's end to the sutra are you payment Acadian what one tried international is can be signed out on an account from the from the stage lighting stuff and I'm accountable to very phenomenal teenager over Innsmouth today for no more month [Music] I also need uptight and regime in particular over who in the rhyme to move mhmm a divider for Mustapha leader whom we can avoid many arrival global the real commands of the mayor quarter calm down water became Antigua 3-0 the demon section of a chaotic Hakone we do move out metals of all could get a reaction on the bubble a lot don't profess to be vector of the identity found and this conflicted of what other states culture we're in Jerusalem where the annual International Astronautical Congress is taking place here all the parties interested in the space race are getting together governments companies and universities there are manufacturers of spaceships rockets and satellites but also lawyers students and astronauts here you can catch a glimpse of the near future of space travel asteroid mining and lunar colonization this year's theme is outer space as a gateway to the future of humanity this conversation about asteroid resource utilization has been discussed in the academic circles for years for 20 years maybe even more 30 years now it's happening because the industry is there and the industry is pushing this forward what will tomorrow look like our world is at its limits and yet we all want more and why not why shouldn't the future be brighter than today but where will it come from simple our tiny planet sits in a vast sea of resources including millions of asteroids bathed in the sun's free energy 24 hours a day the same rocks that could fall from our skies also contain everything we could ever need both out there and down here it's time someone seized the opportunity deep space industries so there's three things we're looking for on asteroids two of them we plan on leaving in space and one one group will take back the first thing we're looking for is water water seems to make no sense to most people when you think about it why would you bring water back to earth and that's why we're not bringing water back but water in space is incredibly valuable it serves a variety of functions in space if you're if you're an astronaut you sure would love something to drink it's also good for growing food in space and if I take water and I split water in half I've got liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen I've got rocket fuel the other thing we're better on asteroids are metals so things like nickel and iron again something we wouldn't bring back to earth because we've got iron and steel and and things like that here but if you want to build something in space the best thing to do is to use what you've got there and so we will use those resources that we find in space to build new structures for space stations or habitats whatever else the third one is the one that people seem to like the most and that's platinum there's a tremendous amount of platinum locked up an asteroid some platinum group metals and that's what we would bring back to earth because platinum group metals are extraordinarily scarce on earth we're not finding anymore we're closing down mines here on earth because we're running out of platinum to mine and that's what we would bring back to earth inviting group metals asteroids have the raw materials that you need to develop two things a space infrastructure the ash infrastructures in space structures such as free-floating structures such as gas stations in space when humans continue to explore space as they move forward they're gonna need to refuel they're gonna need to they're gonna need water they're gonna need structures that need to be developed in space because it's cheaper to develop structures in space than it is to lift them off the ground it's something like $11,000 per pound of mass to lift from Earth so that's very expensive so that's not economically sustainable to develop a space infrastructure into space economy we have a scene in the company that the most valuable resource in space is people eventually we will get to the point where there are people in space and that those people in space are going to need resources to survive and live so we have a we have a a business plan that makes us a profitable company right now but of course our long-term dream just like you've heard from Elon Musk at SpaceX where Elon wants to create a colony on Mars our plan is we'll let's provide the infrastructure and resources for those colonies and people to do exploration [Music] the idea of human beings in space has always inspired the imagination in the future this is only likely to grow the European Space Agency has prepared a presentation about the boundless opportunities of this idea as we look forward towards Mars if we can get resources off the moon that the oxygen and hydrogen that can be a tremendous change in the way we would do Mars class missions if those volatiles are available to us and we can pull those off the surface so we have several investigations as aimed in that direction in the coming years we will see explorers of the lunar poles exploiting the extended sunlight for power and performing research to benefit life on Earth and to understand our place in the universe this new exploration will be achieved not in competition as in the past but through peaceful international cooperation in the future the moon can become a place where the nations of the world can come together to understand our common origins to build a common future and to share a common journey beyond a place where we can learn to move onwards into the solar system [Music] over the years there have been several manned missions resulting in a select group of so-called space walkers most space walkers are not so well known but everyone knows Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin good morning and Shalom my name is so itchy Noguchi i'm japanese astronaut I'm a president of Association of the space explorers and I am proud to say I'm a space Walker Neil Armstrong the first man on the moon is no longer with us but the second moon Walker Buzz Aldrin at 85 is still alive and kicking he's a star among astronauts in 1969 these feet were standing on the moon they are taking him all over the world promoting space exploration yeah probably and put and then turn the mask around the very first speaker talked about Audrey [Applause] [Laughter] southern you know her mama save of art but XP none are Vitelli and let's say the end the gamma hoping to save the hoffman factor just easily NIMH Mihail on all on saying and nayana means cutting resolved normal tinea dutiful doctor even food to demands at this consulate rabbinic courtesy to ansi have an email me rate volatility on the field to stand to happen i was a safe fish our cloaking looking at amount of absolute yeah I want to leave everyone here with one small message and it is get your ass to Mars all right thank you [Applause] alright alright hello one copy please Thanks thank you you know because they're filming about space lo the I'm in space lawyer and they're doing a program on space law developments one of the developments is that we looking for looking for [Music] these are ugly [Music] start of the Space Act evolved in America dahm dahm dahm Zurich for hearty - yaja dr. door and internationality Elohim starts the air - light dots of a public space act full of nectar the balance or the International average temperature Birmingham what I'll start on it come from what a trickle from flag wear metal here in the earth and of State Seward the sweets in the rhyme the overhead pass you know that's what I was hoping you know I should have over afraid in the realm - don't do it of energen Stockman derived districts omo by the Makai fetters hard to to bring now we haven't trained Bob Schneider I'm dizzy near dollar whoo whoo whoo whoo all over the rocks activists and all no sites that you need probably at McCarran finally to death in their arms and our daughters environment anime you've removed all possible to college suddenly TV if the full of shame for for cyber and voila and I'm a novice at see network of communication network a force toward cleaner order and a lot of a filmer states me a frontal sign from God's words network or dot visa Covell states culture is that although he started restoring from the frayed and I need leather like antennas came up and felt contraband or animation inhaler studs on her lungs they trade cocoon we can see of cracker energy weight plot alaikum like impact christian a thought leader to sustain but itís calculate the heck radicand rock died or daughter fall often hopes hardest up compton to holla making the earth it word faded into the captain Hill on the clear and context I stepped over the doctor [Music] more and more countries are planning to go into space a surprising new player at the table is the United Arab Emirates in 2020 they want to be the first Arab country to set foot on Mars with a manned mission and they need quando dunk for that [Music] [Music] [Music] in the Emirates space travel is still in its infancy but following the United States they still wish to play a leading role they are focusing on space tourism transportation and mining as they lack all the necessary knowledge for this they have hired a team of specialists one of them is Peter Marquez an expert on the lucrative raw materials market the UAE leadership has has made a very in my view a very wise decision to go forward on a variety of space activities and they have created a space agency to oversee all this new activity and in the process of doing that the space agency has asked for people from around the world to come in and share their experience and knowledge of how they did space activities in their country and so that's why I'm here to talk about some of the policy issues and things at a national government level how you would operate and that's why Franz is here to talk about law and international laws it applies to space these widely recognized as a global expert on space law so he's one of the people that you seek out his advice on on space legal issues and if you haven't sought his advice then you have a gaping hole in your understanding of space law and Ana come to talk Neapolitan main perspective Abu Dhabi health for the aesthetic of the other hand of food on door o leaders out there a disconnect from a concern over mine blackberries to shake of same sex here for us since yesterday we see a lot of attainder of data here about it's a DBS Neelakanta season early of the all use up of water on October that the pilot plant his own heart knew Harrison or hotels on the for dessert about steak details don't need me Rosen alligators in macaque that's essaouira for under the sec towards space what resilience aim from the sector ever in actually a new even invest yet not constituents Laura died many habit of diplomat more like Eden are 14 or 15 year and an incapacitated about the second faloona economic activity at canary Veronica dominum use of Ohio lapped the entire team of specialists is being convened by the Emirates new u AI Space Agency at the exclusive Armed Forces Officers Club here each specialist is told what is expected of him behind closed doors [Music] [Music] hardy a little Adama haizua by dieter a Latina Elphaba Emery who Vidya welco a cable okra Mohammed a new joy motor to hammer cookie book men finally had at the Elbe Hetty balloon al October while armor can Elphaba a unity bismuth a Marat l1 ojala me water [Music] oil is what has made the Emirates so rich and they're spaced program is funded with oil money but as this source of funds will dry up in the future they plan to obtain their income from another precious material Platinum you're talking about access to critical resources on a level that is I can't even put my head around it the the amount of platinum that is on a 100 meter asteroid the asteroid that we know has platinum on it a one 100 meter asteroid has more platinum on it than has been mined in the history of humankind just one and we know where many of these are so we're talking about access to scarce resources on a scale that that we have never seen in in our in the history of our species there are a variety of ways that the current scarcity of platinum is holding back humankind but then there are ways that you and I can't even imagine right now that platinum could be used an example that we often discuss at the company is aluminum aluminum at one time was one of the more precious metals on the entire planet through scientific discovery we found a process for making aluminum and now we use aluminum to wrap our food in we fly in airplanes made out of aluminum you know it it fundamentally changed how we operate as as people I shall see yesterday yesterday thoughtfully marked non-student took a hill at the Disneyland volpehart yeah who's ever heard a lot the expertise in time divided here five on use it may stuff a lot of gangs ethnic sauce his name so where exactly he said no spawn process for it yeah I wanted to show four years of the show and the boom from say the following if anything's it they kept it for later well think about the poker face but merely the nationality that have in the Netherlands two important ones and I just on to doom Brasilia poorer moment in your palm to do my reach out figure back house and I'm look elements yeah the bets five my distant is my input with Parekh thought okay not itself make you the couch when you been again consider okay Babu tonight acclaim thank you now talking to dinner and goes out of here and that's funny I started up to like that mother can park at the American coast only to d-day there before reporting out for my birthday it is ignore the other him around and fall out of a turn and push a but door Alice Cavani D Edward Rosa dietary so Pat viola surgeon and kills neatly made therefore most okay [Music] the lunatic is on the grass munna to design the grass [Music] see [Music] [Applause] [Music] deep space industries has been invited to a technology festival in The Hague where saggy kefir and one of the founders of the company are giving a presentation about the future of humanity today we're going to talk about what is happening and is about to happen in space and how it relates to shall we say civilization my vision of the future in space is an expanding civilization I see cities floating between the worlds that are rotating that have people living in them that have created environments where they want to live I see lights on the moon I see cities on Mars you know I love the idea of planting a tree on the moon you know or watching a butterfly land on a flower on Mars I mean that sounds really quaint and corny but that's the thing for me for me you know a transcendental moment is to walk out into a pasture in Texas way far away from the city and hearing the the creatures of the night and the crickets and the city lights are so far away that I can look up and actually see the Milky Way you know or I can see the moon and and you know and just really get a feeling that it's right there and I like I often sometimes I'll walk out in the middle of the night when I'm out there like that and I'll look up when I go we're coming we're coming man you know it's it's like I don't come in [Music] so you've got things like this these are pretty big things these are communities these are cities in space by the way we are destination agnostic the moon Mars doesn't matter it's all about a community of people taking on the unknown and transforming it into the near known into the place where they are going to be where they're going to live the mining of raw materials is a prerequisite for the next step in space the building of settlements then nothing will stand in the way of humans colonizing space it's as if history is repeating itself in the 19th century hordes of settlers left Europe behind but the distant and promising shores of America when people went to the new world where I was born you know they went for all kinds of reasons they didn't know what they were gonna find there they didn't realize they were gonna you know find a constitution or a Bill of Rights they didn't realize they were gonna find or build a culture that was going to do the kind of things that our culture has done and I don't mean to say that and sound like Oh God he's an American he's so full of hubris but you know I'm kind of proud of what we've done I think we've done pretty good but you know I come from a place that was created to be better than the place people had left behind and whatever we create on Mars or we create on the moon or create in space will be of the earth but it will evolve its own way so for example a child that grows up on the moon under one-sixth gravity will be unique to the moon I call that Homo Linares a child that grows up on Mars will be unique to Mars homo Mars jealous okay homo space cialis you know they're going to be their own species they're gonna do their own thing but and that they declare independence and they fight the mother country the mother planet it's inevitable it always happens you know I don't care whether this all ends in war no no they go their own way it's funny every time I don't care what culture you're from if you go somewhere else eventually you begin to identify as citizens of that place and the people that sent you there are those people they don't understand us we are now independent I don't care if the people and this is what's kind of interesting it's kind of hopeful whether the people that go to the Moon and Mars are from Russia or China or Connecticut once they get there they're basically at some point going to say screw you we are the people of the moon we are the people of Mars you don't understand us we are independent it doesn't matter where they come from it's October 2015 Vonda dunk has arrived in Washington the place is abuzz with rumors about the Space Act will it be passed or not he had been emotional brain stem in common additional - aquifers and assumed a Ponte Vedra equivariance Township over America text and alchemy the moment you do a formal opposite see my evoke that the opposites for our politic fifties and armed unik made at La Mora scheana and Richland niches erupt in how look you really suspect the humble it is a Romero but Armenia suggested auditorium form from American imperialism is for our low population of a lot and I uniform hope you vote on it at the Julie courage I think fact materials off of you you read here he'll fill Buble American hammer that will need said that the dotted need Osmo come on sport around a tiny catheter home who did it a year the vet say we need a lot on trigger move our doctor in Villa and I couldn't no holding old star upon except on hate I really Dominican stroke his first day cause international arrest three Chico is a nanites that here that here Cowboys cat did I do not Sevilla and hotel also for market and almost lights and it's a little garlic ranch for Langley but you politic you conflicted over caramel on the defensive resilience on the horizon and the harm scheme of rush to uniform he meets a doctor sanity Chico's the achievement we still think the United States has a nuclear facility on the Dark Side of the Moon as always these conspiracy hands I didn't think it did you know but it but in all seriousness no matter what approach we take they'll always be that element in the international community that that still thinks the United States is the boogeyman and it's all a conspiracy world we're here to take over the powers of up space space is kind of big there's a little bit of room for everybody to come get involved absolutely absolutely we want our competitors the other companies we want other countries we want everybody to get involved it isn't a matter of the United States saying we own space there are some people that may come out and say oh my god here they go again it's the Americans you know of course that will happen course it's going to be because of those damn Americans you can't trust them so that's what they that's what they tell you absolutely yeah there are people that don't trust anything anybody from the United States does [Music] you know you're just gonna have to judge us by what we do I can sit here and tell you all day long that our intentions are great and if you don't believe my intentions are great you're gonna hold your belief and everything I do that isn't absolutely clear you're going to take us oh my god they're changing the laws so they can you know American Dominion they're jingoistic frontier grabbing bastards who are going to somehow you know fine just watch what we do in Washington lawyers lobbyists and companies active in the space industry are gathering for their annual meeting the theme is what are the risks of the Space Act but actually everyone is waiting anxiously for the act to be ratified no one knows when this will happen but Peter Marquez is well-connected and knows a bit more than the rest I do have white smoke and another issue okay yes the Senate is voting tonight under unanimous consent rules on the our ability Wow tonight so the bill is essentially done and then it's just the president which has to sign the president signs it and we've talked to the White House and the White House says they're on board so Wow so then it's just a procedural so we can have already a small party tonight yeah I mean we don't need to have the conference today I see we're just starting but we as you and I will have to take care of our audience right we don't just say okay here's why I can discuss then you know I'm not discussing this in this room I'm not discussing it at all I think we should keep this between ourselves let the Senate get its vote under way first right yeah I'm not one for snatching defeat from the jaws of victory my background is actually in government policy national security space on space policy issues so I worked for the US government for over a decade working space policy there and spent eight years in the Pentagon working national security space programs and then was the space policy director in the White House for two presidents okay you were I was the space policy director at the White House for President Bush and President Obama really yeah the same evening the Space Act was passed by a large majority of Republicans and Democrats in the Senate in November 2015 the law was signed by President Obama a new era is dawning it was our firm belief and I think many in the international legal community that there was an inferred right to obtain property in space to to recover resources and own those resources but none of that was explicit so when a company like mine goes in to talk to investors they say okay we actually were cool with the technology we actually believe you can go do this but when the dog catches the car what's the dog gonna do you know are you gonna be able to protect my investment that I'm putting into this company and that was always a concern and we would say well you know the law allows it and they said it allows it but is it explicit can I actually bank on this literally bank on it this has given us a tremendous level of certainty that will unlock a vast amount of investment resources and also give us certainty in what we can do in the future and so that's that's a tremendous tremendous thing and and it's a historic thing in my opinion one little paragraph in title four of a commercial space bill is is tremendously historic and I don't think that should be lost on anybody here in the public as to what is happening now that 50 years of discussion and and hand wringing is at least been made very very clear here in the United States and I think that's important to note good we got the big whale in the boat we got property rights I think I'm worried about the internationals I wouldn't even go overseas to talk about it I mean these are the questions were going to be asked please so lobbyists will be employed what's that Lisa lobbyists will be employed for the next couple of years to manage all them so we're gonna figure it out but you know what the first enormous step is taken is our coalition of different clients top Bashar in Kabul met paving from of our partners the inhaler call to stop for rights be taken you know to over 3,000 gerenuk imported here you know those the men said there were three guys enjoy and real artists under a hobby thought stone the IRA to create herself in a dilemma for example the irony to define regrets violent word is dr. Dom did to Gina's and B'Elanna Reiki stopping the process ah [Music] [Applause] is in the hole exhale do happy keiki neat nerado's encode he'll Monica Keena ladders and plank near here at all mate Lacaille all the worst wording found grasp ahead from the air and from the nozzle height for eternity I'm dizzy Indians see a layman pass the table who fail the planet and for she near time I'll see you sighs [Music] thank you for watching for more on this subject take a look at the playlist you can also watch this recommended video don't forget to subscribe to our Channel and we'll keep you updated on our documentaries [Music]
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Channel: vpro documentary
Views: 10,243
Rating: 4.8773007 out of 5
Keywords: space race, space law, space act, space legislation, space, race, future life in space, life in space, future space, civilization in space, colonization in space, outer space, space for tourism, space transportation, space raw materials, planets, asteroids, space planets, Technology, Backlight Technology, Technology documentary, documentary, vpro documentary, vpro documentaries, vpro backlight, Free documentary, subtitled documentary
Id: 7TxNEr6-EOE
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 47min 59sec (2879 seconds)
Published: Fri Jan 11 2019
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