Visualized: Exploring Space and Humanity’s Future

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The following content is sponsored by Dubai Future Forum

Beyond the Atmosphere: Exploring Space and Humanity’s Future

Key Takeaways

  • Commercial firms have become the leaders in exploring space by conducting 70% of global spacecraft launches in 2024.
  • Launch costs have fallen dramatically and may decline another 95%, making exploring space more accessible than ever.
  • The space economy is projected to exceed $1 trillion by 2032.

Exploring space, that final frontier, has become a unifying goal as nations collaborate to extend beyond Earth. A new wave of commercial players and national space programmes are expanding access and reshaping exploration and governance alike

In partnership with Dubai Future Forum, the world’s largest gathering of futurists taking place every November in Dubai, this graphic shows how exploration, investment, and innovation are converging to transform our understanding of space.

It’s one of four dimensions—Ocean, Mind, Space, and Land—within the Dubai Future Forum’s larger theme, Exploring the Unknown.

The data comes from these sources:

Global Citizens, Galactic Pathways

As of 2024, only three countries have the capabilities of independent human spaceflight: China, Russia, and the United states.

However, the number of countries with interplanetary probe capabilities has grown to eight, including the UAE Space Agency (UAESA) which successfully launched the Mars Hope Probe in 2020.

To see how this breaks down, here is a table of National Space Programmes around the world:

Country Human Space Flight Interplanetary Probe Capability Space Programme Acronym
United States Yes Yes NASA, USSF
China Yes Yes CNSA
Russia Yes Yes ROSCOSMOS
India Yes ISRO
Pakistan Yes SUPARCO
Japan Yes JAXA
South Korea Yes KARI, KASI
United Arab Emirates Yes UAESA
Brazil AEB
Iran ISA
United Kingdom UKSA
France CNES
Italy ASI
Argentina CONAE
Canada CSA/ASC
Ukraine SSAU
Poland POLSA
Australia ASA and NSP
Sweden SNSA
Israel ISA
New Zealand NZSA
Indonesia LAPAN
Nigeria NASRDA
Bangladesh SPARRSO
Ethiopia ESSTI
Mexico AEM
Egypt EgSA, NARSS, EASRT-RSC
Philippines PhilSA
Vietnam TTVTVN or VNSC, VAST-VNSC
Turkey TUA
Germany DLR
Thailand GISTDA
South Africa SANSA
Kenya KSA
Colombia CCE
Spain AEE
Algeria ASAL
Angola GGPEN
Morocco CRTS
Malaysia MYSA
Ghana GSSTI
Peru CONIDA
Saudi Arabia SSA
Venezuela ABAE
North Korea NATA
Taiwan TASA
Kazakhstan KazCosmos
Chile CSA
Romania ASR, ROSA
Netherlands SRON
Rwanda RSA
Tunisia CNCT
Azerbaijan Azercosmos
Greece HSC
Hungary HSO
Austria ASAL
Switzerland SSO
Turkmenistan TNSA
Paraguay AEP
Bulgaria SRI-BAS, STIL-BAS
Denmark DNSC, DTU Space
Singapore CRISP
Norway NRS
NSC
Mongolia NRSC
Lithuania LSA
Bahrain BSA
Uzbekistan Uzbekspace agency
Syria SSA
Bolivia ABE
Belgium BIRA, IASB, BISA
Portugal PTSPACE
Belarus BSA
El Salvador ESAI
Costa Rica AEC
Luxembourg LSA

Even as the number of national programmes continues to grow, commercial firms now operate 70% of all spacecraft launches into orbit.

As a result, launch costs are 40x cheaper than the 1980s and are expected to fall by an additional 95% in the future.

Space Stations of the Future

With the International Space Station (ISS) nearing retirement after decades of service, the future looks far more commercial.

Here is a table that shows the expected timelines for announced space stations:

Name Flag Entity Program Launch Date
International Space Station US NASA, RosCosmos, ESA, CSA, JAXA Government 1998
Tiangong Space Station China CMSA Government 2021
Haven-1 US Vast Commercial 2026
Axiom Station US Axiom Space Commercial 2027
Lunar Gateway US Government 2027
Orbital Reef US Blue Origin, Sierra Space Commercial 2027
Russian Orbital Service Station Russia Roscosmos Government 2027
Bharatiya Antariksh Station India ISRO Government 2028
Starlab US NanoRacks, Voyager Space, Airbus, MDA Space, Mitsubishi Commercial 2029
Haven-2 US Vast Commercial 2028
Lunar Orbital Station Russia Roscosmos Government 2028
Artificial Gravity Station US Vast Commercial 2035

The new generation of space stations signals not just a change in leadership, but the dawn of a new space economy.

The Trillion-Dollar Space Economy

Space is emerging as one of the fastest growing economic frontiers. By 2032, commercial enterprises will push the value of the space economy beyond $1 trillion by 2032

For a clearer comparison, here is a table comparing commercial to government space budgets in 2024:

Sector Value ($ Billions)
Commercial Space Products and Services 343
Commercial Infrastructure and Support Industries 137
U.S. Government Space Budgets 77
Non-U.S Government Space Budgets 55
Global Space Economy, 2024 $613 Billion

Commercial budgets currently far exceed government, with commercial space products and services ($343 billion) leading the way.

Looking Ahead: The Future of Space

The future of space is being fueled by innovations in biohacking, dark energy, and advanced network integration.

To continue exploring the space and its biggest emerging opportunities shaping the future, read the Dubai Future Foundation’s Global 50 report.

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