Jaden Schaefer
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
If Starship is able to
you know, achieve its intended cost reductions per kilogram to orbit, then I think the business case is going to shift dramatically.
But right now, because it is so expensive, even for Starship to get things into orbit, this doesn't feel like a profitable business.
You know, he's like, you know, it's way cheaper because there's like no land permitting and, you know, we don't have to get water to cool these things and we have unlimited solar.
And so those things are true, but just getting these satellites into space is expensive.
But Starship has a plan to decrease costs
their payload costs.
So being able to get things into space for cheaper, they're planning on doing a lot of optimizations.
And if they are able to do those optimizations, perhaps this becomes a profitable business.
Today, the Falcon 9 already delivers basically the best
Yeah, absolutely.
Part of basically saving a lot of their costs is how much of the rockets can be reused if they shoot something up and they bring it back down.
And that's kind of the thing that they saved a killer of money over NASA was just that the rockets now were not exploding or crashing on reentry.
They're actually able to reuse them.
So how many times can they reuse them?
How many parts can be reused?
How much do they need to be repaired?
If they can bring all those costs down and just have a vehicle that goes up and down to space over and over again,
That's where they start saving a lot of money.
And they have a goal and a plan for that.