{"id":14256,"date":"2016-08-08T14:54:53","date_gmt":"2016-08-08T14:54:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/blogbox.indianeagle.com\/?p=14256"},"modified":"2016-08-11T19:44:19","modified_gmt":"2016-08-11T19:44:19","slug":"moon-express-founder-naveen-jain-on-worlds-first-commercial-space-mission","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/moon-express-founder-naveen-jain-on-worlds-first-commercial-space-mission\/","title":{"rendered":"Indian American Entrepreneur Naveen Jain to Explore the Moon for Commercial Resources"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Indian American community is creating history and making headlines for good, unusual, inspiring reasons<\/strong> including grabbing prestigious scholarships, winning White House contests, doing philanthropy in India, featuring on global business magazines, playing important roles in the US-India relationship, launching initiatives for socio-economic progress, etc.<\/p>\n The first commercial space mission by an Indian American entrepreneur is the latest focus of the global spotlight on the Indian community in USA<\/a><\/span><\/strong>. Naveen Jain, co-founder of Florida-based startup Moon Express, has successfully sought approval from the US government to land on the moon. Moon Express, founded in 2010, is headquartered at Mountain View in California.<\/p>\n \u201cTo execute a commercial mission beyond the earth\u2019s orbit with US government\u2019s support is not just an ambitious project but a historic move by a private startup,\u201d says entrepreneur Naveen Jain, who hails from the Indian State of Uttar Pradesh by birth.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Naveen Jain, a serial Indian American entrepreneur who founded a number of companies in different niches from online search to software services, has collaborated with space entrepreneur Robert Richards to embark on the world\u2019s first commercial space mission in the second half of 2017. A piece of scientific hardware weighing 20 pounds will be landed on the moon\u2019s surface for asteroid mining.<\/p>\n The approval from the White House<\/a><\/span>, the Federal Aviation Administration, the State Department and NASA is the first major step for the Moon Express founder Naveen Jain towards execution of the project<\/strong> which falls under the Outer Space Treaty of 1967. Private agencies are required to seek approval for space missions in compliance with this international regulatory agreement introduced by the United States and Russia.<\/p>\n The principal purpose of Moon Express\u2019 upcoming space mission is to collect information about asteroid mining on the moon and make the path for commercial space tourism. To encourage more such scientific breakthroughs<\/a><\/span> down the line is another purpose, according to Naveen Jain, an MBA and IIT graduate from India.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n With the official approval in place, Moon Express has started developing an advanced, scalable, autonomous robotic spacecraft for the commercial space mission in 2017.<\/strong> The new-age spacecraft is expected to unravel the extraterrestrial mysteries of the moon and explore commercially potential resources of the moon at lesser costs of space exploration than the projects by government agencies.<\/p>\n Indian American entrepreneur Naveen Jain expects to explore the moon and find out its resources including platinum, diamond, gold, silver and rare elements worth \u2018billions of dollars\u2019 on the first mission.<\/strong> It will be followed by another mission to mine those resources and bring them to earth. He says that water on the moon is a good ingredient for rocket fuel and the fuel for human consumption.<\/p>\n Naveen Jain, an ex-employee of Microsoft, is also a noted columnist for the Wall Street Journal, the Huffington Post and Forbes. He is a philanthropist too.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n
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