GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:Well, you could envision a scenario of an Earth which is desperately overpopulated and most of the arable land on the planet has either become desert, or sits unde ice-sheets, owing to climate change. An Earth in this scenario may well need to import some food to make up for what it can't produce on its own. Though an Earth in this sort of future would also be exporting people as fast as it can find places for them, and the conditions on Earth would make it so the population of the planet would be in the process of crashing.
I still don't see how that would change the fact you could do the exact same thing on Earth. Overcrowded? Stack 'em tall and bury 'em deep. Drain an ocean or two, while you are at it, and set sentries all around to keep people from overrunning the place while you build your huge biodome to grow the food in.
Seriously, why a space station? We have several miles of atmosphere to expand into and several miles of crust to bore under. Think Coruscant. In addition, there
must be some room left on Earth; due to the fact you have to mine the metals and produce the parts to build that station with in the first place.
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:And besides you're bringing the food to Earth, which means your main cost is ensuring it survives the trip from the top of Earth's gravity well (I don't know where the hell you're getting this need to fling the food out of a gravity well.)
Woah woah woah, step back there. I said you would need to chuck the materials to grow that food up there, not the food itself. Unless you somehow know of a way we can build advanced space stations with no parts being pre-assembled in factories, no tools but those naturally occuring in space, and no planetside construction facilities....
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:However, to satisfy the caloric needs (2000 calories) of every person (well, six billion people) on Earth for a day requires efficiently dropping two million metric tons of food on the planet. To feed the richest 1% of that population would take 20,000 metric tons per day. That might make such a scenario more viable, where those bankrolling the colonization are expecting some sort of kickback or tax to dissuade them from sending the Marines (a sort of protection racket, if you will.)
That's a lot of food. Do tell, how is this food going to be produced? Because if it uses anything short of UBERWANK collection of solar energy and direct conversion of energy into food substances, Earth will be needing to ship up two million metric tons of minerals per day to replace the amount lost growing this food. And if they can gather and ship two fucking million metric tons of raw resources per day into an Earth orbit, why the hell do they need space stations to grow the food? Build a damn floating city or massive Antarctic BioDome, or something.