Later today the X Prize Foundation is scheduled to announce its next major prize competition, which has been billed as “the largest international prize in history” with a Fortune 500 sponsor. However, there is already one credible report about the prize. According to a blog post by Esther Wojcicki on The Huffington Post, today’s announcement will be the $30-million Google Lunar XPrize. the competition will be for the first privately-developed mission to place a robotic rover on the surface of the Moon. The post includes a link to the prize web site, which currently returns a “404 Not Found” error message. (There’s a typo in the link in the HuffPo post: it should be googlelunarxprize.org, not googlelunarprize.org. The googlelunarxprize.org domain is registered to the X Prize Foundation, according to whois.) The article also references a space section of the Google web site; that, too, also returns a 404 error message early this morning.
If this report is correct, then it is not that surprising. A “real” lunar lander competition had long been discussed as a potential long-term prize, either for the X Prize or NASA’s Centennial Challenges program. (NASA deputy administrator Shana Dale will participate in the prize announcement today in Los Angeles, NASA announced yesterday.) And it’s also not that surprising to see Google taking a lead sponsorship role, given that Google co-founder Larry Page is on the board of trustees of the X Prize Foundation and that Google has hosted some X Prize-related events in the past. It does sound more credible than some of the other ideas that have been floated about, like a point-to-point suborbital space prize.
And why should you trust Esther Wojcicki anyway? She’s a high school journalism teacher in Palo Alto, California. She’s also the mother-in-law of Sergey Brin, the other co-founder of Google, so she’s something of an inside source.
[…] According to Personal SpaceFlight, today the X-Prize foundation and Google are teaming up to start a Lunar X-Prize. I can’t wait, and expect it to be claimed in about, hmm…5-7 years, based solely on the […]
http://www.xprize.org/lunar/press-release/google-sponsors-lunar-x-prize-to-create-a-space-race-for-a-new-generation
The press release is out
Thanks to Andy for the press release link.
And congratulations and kudos to the X PRIZE Foundation for developing an exciting yet thoughtful set of prize objectives and securing the funding and other sources of support for it.
It’s rather sad, though, that NASA has no substantive role in this endeavour. Had Congress and NASA properly funded the Centennial Challenges program, this competition could have started years ago. Between a lack of NASA prize funding, the effective termination of NASA’s Lunar Robotic Exploration Program, and the deferrel of decisions on Ares V/EDS/LSAM to the next White House, the agency’s relevance to future lunar exploration is rapidly receding. Too bad… but thank goodness private entities like the X PRIZE are there to pick up some of the pieces.
SWEET!
[…] this morning here in LA (where I discovered I created a little heartburn among the X Prize folks by linking to the HuffPo piece earlier this morning.) I’ll have more later, but some highlights from the […]
“And why should you trust Esther Wojcicki anyway? She’s a high school journalism teacher in Palo Alto, California. She’s also the mother-in-law of Sergey Brin, the other co-founder of Google, so she’s something of an inside source.”
Never, ever, trust your mother in law to keep a secret…