ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Diamandis - Space activist
Peter Diamandis runs the X Prize Foundation, which offers large cash incentive prizes to inventors who can solve grand challenges like space flight, low-cost mobile medical diagnostics and oil spill cleanup. He is the chair of Singularity University, which teaches executives and grad students about exponentially growing technologies.

Why you should listen

Watch the live onstage debate with Paul Gilding that followed Peter Diamandis' 2012 TEDTalk >>

Peter Diamandis is the founder and chair of the X Prize Foundation, a nonprofit whose mission is simply "to bring about radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity." By offering a big cash prize for a specific accomplishment, the X Prize stimulates competition and excitement around some of the planet's most important goals. Diamandis is also co-founder and chairman of Singularity University which runs Exponential Technologies Executive and Graduate Student Programs.

Diamandis' background is in space exploration -- before the X Prize, he ran a company that studied low-cost launching technologies and Zero-G which offers the public the chance to train like an astronaut and experience weightlessness. But though the X Prize's first $10 million went to a space-themed challenge, Diamandis' goal now is to extend the prize into health care, social policy, education and many other fields that could use a dose of competitive innovation.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Diamandis | Speaker | TED.com
TEDGlobal 2005

Peter Diamandis: Our next giant leap

Filmed:
574,903 views

Peter Diamandis says it's our moral imperative to keep exploring space -- and he talks about how, with the X Prize and other incentives, we're going to do just that.
- Space activist
Peter Diamandis runs the X Prize Foundation, which offers large cash incentive prizes to inventors who can solve grand challenges like space flight, low-cost mobile medical diagnostics and oil spill cleanup. He is the chair of Singularity University, which teaches executives and grad students about exponentially growing technologies. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

00:18
My mission in life since I was a kid was,
0
0
3000
00:21
and is, to take the rest of you into space.
1
3000
3000
00:24
It's during our lifetime that we're going to take the Earth,
2
6000
4000
00:28
take the people of Earth and transition off, permanently. And that's exciting.
3
10000
4000
00:32
In fact, I think it is a moral imperative
4
14000
2000
00:34
that we open the space frontier.
5
16000
3000
00:37
You know, it's the first time that we're going to have a chance
6
19000
2000
00:39
to have planetary redundancy,
7
21000
2000
00:41
a chance to, if you would, back up the biosphere.
8
23000
3000
00:44
And if you think about space,
9
26000
3000
00:47
everything we hold of value on this planet --
10
29000
3000
00:50
metals and minerals and real estate and energy -- is in infinite quantities in space.
11
32000
4000
00:54
In fact, the Earth is a crumb in a supermarket filled with resources.
12
36000
5000
00:59
The analogy for me is Alaska. You know, we bought Alaska.
13
41000
3000
01:02
We Americans bought Alaska in the 1850s. It's called Seward's folly.
14
44000
4000
01:06
We valued it as the number of seal pelts we could kill.
15
48000
4000
01:10
And then we discovered these things -- gold and oil and fishing and timber --
16
52000
4000
01:14
and it became, you know, a trillion-dollar economy,
17
56000
3000
01:17
and now we take our honeymoons there. The same thing will happen in space.
18
59000
3000
01:20
We are on the verge of the greatest exploration
19
62000
3000
01:23
that the human race has ever known.
20
65000
2000
01:25
We explore for three reasons,
21
67000
2000
01:27
the weakest of which is curiosity.
22
69000
2000
01:29
You know, it's funded NASA's budget up until now.
23
71000
4000
01:33
Some images from Mars, 1997.
24
75000
3000
01:36
In fact, I think in the next decade, without any question,
25
78000
2000
01:38
we will discover life on Mars and find that it is literally ubiquitous
26
80000
4000
01:42
under the soils and different parts of that planet.
27
84000
3000
01:45
The stronger motivator, the much stronger motivator, is fear.
28
87000
3000
01:48
It drove us to the moon. We -- literally in fear -- with the Soviet Union
29
90000
4000
01:52
raced to the moon. And we have these huge rocks,
30
94000
4000
01:56
you know, killer-sized rocks in the hundreds of thousands or millions out there,
31
98000
5000
02:01
and while the probability is very small,
32
103000
2000
02:03
the impact, figured in literally,
33
105000
2000
02:05
of one of these hitting the Earth is so huge
34
107000
3000
02:08
that to spend a small fraction looking, searching,
35
110000
3000
02:11
preparing to defend, is not unreasonable.
36
113000
2000
02:13
And of course, the third motivator,
37
115000
2000
02:15
one near and dear to my heart as an entrepreneur, is wealth.
38
117000
4000
02:19
In fact, the greatest wealth. If you think about these other asteroids,
39
121000
4000
02:23
there's a class of the nickel iron,
40
125000
2000
02:25
which in platinum-group metal markets alone
41
127000
2000
02:27
are worth something like 20 trillion dollars,
42
129000
2000
02:29
if you can go out and grab one of these rocks.
43
131000
2000
02:31
My plan is to actually buy puts on the precious metal market,
44
133000
3000
02:34
and then actually claim that I'm going to go out and get one.
45
136000
2000
02:36
And that will fund the actual mission to go and get one.
46
138000
3000
02:39
But fear, curiosity and greed have driven us.
47
141000
3000
02:42
And for me, this is -- I'm the short kid on the right.
48
144000
4000
02:46
This was -- my motivation was actually during Apollo.
49
148000
4000
02:50
And Apollo was one of the greatest motivators ever.
50
152000
2000
02:52
If you think about what happened at the turn of -- early 1960s,
51
154000
6000
02:58
on May 25, JFK said, "We're going to go to the moon."
52
160000
4000
03:02
And people left their jobs and they went to obscure locations
53
164000
3000
03:05
to go and be part of this amazing mission.
54
167000
3000
03:08
And we knew nothing about going to space.
55
170000
2000
03:10
We went from having literally put Alan Shepard in suborbital flight
56
172000
3000
03:13
to going to the moon in eight years,
57
175000
2000
03:15
and the average age of the people that got us there was 26 years old.
58
177000
6000
03:21
They didn't know what couldn't be done.
59
183000
1000
03:22
They had to make up everything.
60
184000
3000
03:25
And that, my friend, is amazing motivation.
61
187000
2000
03:27
This is Gene Cernan, a good friend of mine, saying,
62
189000
3000
03:30
"If I can go to the moon" -- this is the last human on the moon so far --
63
192000
4000
03:34
"nothing, nothing is impossible." But of course,
64
196000
3000
03:37
we've thought about the government always as the person taking us there.
65
199000
4000
03:41
But I put forward here, the government is not going to get us there.
66
203000
4000
03:45
The government is unable to take the risks required to open up this precious frontier.
67
207000
5000
03:50
The shuttle is costing a billion dollars a launch.
68
212000
2000
03:52
That's a pathetic number. It's unreasonable.
69
214000
3000
03:55
We shouldn't be happy in standing for that.
70
217000
3000
03:58
One of the things that we did with the Ansari X PRIZE
71
220000
2000
04:00
was take the challenge on that risk is OK, you know.
72
222000
4000
04:04
As we are going out there and taking on a new frontier,
73
226000
3000
04:07
we should be allowed to risk.
74
229000
2000
04:09
In fact, anyone who says we shouldn't, you know,
75
231000
3000
04:12
just needs to be put aside, because, as we go forward,
76
234000
4000
04:16
in fact, the greatest discoveries we will ever know is ahead of us.
77
238000
4000
04:20
The entrepreneurs in the space business are the furry mammals,
78
242000
3000
04:23
and clearly the industrial-military complex --
79
245000
2000
04:25
with Boeing and Lockheed and NASA -- are the dinosaurs.
80
247000
4000
04:29
The ability for us to access these resources
81
251000
3000
04:32
to gain planetary redundancy --
82
254000
2000
04:34
we can now gather all the information, the genetic codes,
83
256000
3000
04:37
you know, everything stored on our databases,
84
259000
2000
04:39
and back them up off the planet,
85
261000
2000
04:41
in case there would be one of those disastrous situations.
86
263000
4000
04:45
The difficulty is getting there, and clearly, the cost to orbit is key.
87
267000
5000
04:50
Once you're in orbit, you are two thirds of the way, energetically, to anywhere --
88
272000
3000
04:53
the moon, to Mars. And today,
89
275000
3000
04:56
there's only three vehicles -- the U.S. shuttle, the Russian Soyuz
90
278000
4000
05:00
and the Chinese vehicle -- that gets you there.
91
282000
2000
05:02
Arguably, it's about 100 million dollars a person on the space shuttle.
92
284000
5000
05:07
One of the companies I started, Space Adventures, will sell you a ticket.
93
289000
3000
05:10
We've done two so far. We'll be announcing two more on the Soyuz
94
292000
4000
05:14
to go up to the space station for 20 million dollars.
95
296000
3000
05:17
But that's expensive and to understand what the potential is --
96
299000
4000
05:21
(Laughter) --
97
303000
2000
05:23
it is expensive. But people are willing to pay that!
98
305000
3000
05:26
You know, one -- we have a very unique period in time today.
99
308000
3000
05:29
For the first time ever, we have enough wealth
100
311000
2000
05:31
concentrated in the hands of few individuals
101
313000
2000
05:33
and the technology accessible
102
315000
2000
05:35
that will allow us to really drive space exploration.
103
317000
4000
05:39
But how cheap could it get? I want to give you the end point.
104
321000
4000
05:43
We know -- 20 million dollars today, you can go and buy a ticket,
105
325000
2000
05:45
but how cheap could it get?
106
327000
2000
05:47
Let's go back to high school physics here.
107
329000
1000
05:48
If you calculate the amount of potential energy, mgh,
108
330000
4000
05:52
to take you and your spacesuit up to a couple hundred miles,
109
334000
3000
05:55
and then you accelerate yourself to 17,500 miles per hour --
110
337000
4000
05:59
remember, that one half MV squared -- and you figure it out.
111
341000
4000
06:03
It's about 5.7 gigajoules of energy.
112
345000
4000
06:07
If you expended that over an hour, it's about 1.6 megawatts.
113
349000
5000
06:12
If you go to one of Vijay's micro-power sources,
114
354000
3000
06:15
and they sell it to you for seven cents a kilowatt hour --
115
357000
2000
06:17
anybody here fast in math?
116
359000
2000
06:19
How much will it cost you and your spacesuit to go to orbit?
117
361000
4000
06:23
100 bucks. That's the price-improvement curve that --
118
365000
4000
06:27
we need some breakthroughs in physics along the way,
119
369000
2000
06:29
I'll grant you that.
120
371000
3000
06:32
(Laughter)
121
374000
1000
06:33
But guys, if history has taught us anything,
122
375000
4000
06:37
it's that if you can imagine it, you will get there eventually.
123
379000
3000
06:40
I have no question that the physics,
124
382000
3000
06:43
the engineering to get us down to the point
125
385000
3000
06:46
where all of us can afford orbital space flight is around the corner.
126
388000
4000
06:50
The difficulty is that there needs to be a real marketplace to drive the investment.
127
392000
5000
06:55
Today, the Boeings and the Lockheeds don't spend a dollar
128
397000
4000
06:59
of their own money in R&D.
129
401000
2000
07:01
It's all government research dollars, and very few of those.
130
403000
3000
07:04
And in fact, the large corporations,
131
406000
2000
07:06
the governments, can't take the risk.
132
408000
2000
07:08
So we need what I call an exothermic economic reaction in space.
133
410000
4000
07:12
Today's commercial markets worldwide, global commercial launch market?
134
414000
4000
07:16
12 to 15 launches per year.
135
418000
3000
07:19
Number of commercial companies out there? 12 to 15 companies.
136
421000
2000
07:21
One per company. That's not it. There's only one marketplace,
137
423000
4000
07:25
and I call them self-loading carbon payloads.
138
427000
3000
07:28
They come with their own money. They're easy to make.
139
430000
3000
07:31
It's people. The Ansari X PRIZE was my solution,
140
433000
4000
07:35
reading about Lindbergh for creating the vehicles to get us there.
141
437000
4000
07:39
We offered 10 million dollars in cash for the first reusable ship,
142
441000
3000
07:42
carry three people up to 100 kilometers,
143
444000
2000
07:44
come back down, and within two weeks, make the trip again.
144
446000
3000
07:47
Twenty-six teams from seven countries entered the competition,
145
449000
4000
07:51
spending between one to 25 million dollars each.
146
453000
3000
07:54
And of course, we had beautiful SpaceShipOne,
147
456000
2000
07:56
which made those two flights and won the competition.
148
458000
4000
08:00
And I'd like to take you there, to that morning,
149
462000
3000
08:03
for just a quick video.
150
465000
2000
08:21
(Video) Pilot: Release our fire.
151
483000
2000
08:26
Richard Searfoss: Good luck.
152
488000
5000
08:31
(Applause)
153
493000
7000
08:46
RS: We've got an altitude call of 368,000 feet.
154
508000
8000
08:54
(Applause)
155
516000
1000
08:57
RS: So in my official capacity as the chief judge
156
519000
3000
09:00
of the Ansari X PRIZE competition,
157
522000
2000
09:02
I declare that Mojave Aerospace Ventures
158
524000
2000
09:04
has indeed earned the Ansari X PRIZE.
159
526000
3000
09:07
(Applause)
160
529000
2000
09:09
Peter Diamandis: Probably the most difficult thing that I had to do
161
531000
2000
09:11
was raise the capital for this. It was literally impossible.
162
533000
3000
09:14
We went -- I went to 100, 200 CEOs, CMOs.
163
536000
4000
09:18
No one believed it was done. Everyone said, "Oh, what does NASA think?
164
540000
2000
09:20
Well, people are going to die,
165
542000
2000
09:22
how can you possibly going to put this forward?"
166
544000
2000
09:24
I found a visionary family, the Ansari family, and Champ Car,
167
546000
3000
09:27
and raised part of the money, but not the full 10 million.
168
549000
3000
09:30
And what I ended up doing was going out to the insurance industry
169
552000
4000
09:34
and buying a hole-in-one insurance policy.
170
556000
2000
09:36
See, the insurance companies went to Boeing and Lockheed,
171
558000
2000
09:38
and said, "Are you going to compete?" No.
172
560000
2000
09:40
"Are you going to compete?" No. "No one's going to win this thing."
173
562000
2000
09:42
So, they took a bet that no one would win by January of '05,
174
564000
5000
09:47
and I took a bet that someone would win.
175
569000
4000
09:51
(Applause)
176
573000
1000
09:52
So -- and the best thing is they paid off and the check didn't bounce.
177
574000
6000
09:58
(Laughter)
178
580000
1000
09:59
We've had a lot of accomplishments
179
581000
2000
10:01
and it's been a tremendous success.
180
583000
2000
10:03
One of the things I'm most happy about is that the SpaceShipOne
181
585000
6000
10:09
is going to hang in Air and Space Museum,
182
591000
2000
10:11
next to the Spirit of St. Louis and the Wright Flyer.
183
593000
2000
10:13
Isn't that great? (Applause)
184
595000
5000
10:18
So a little bit about the future, steps to space, what's available for you.
185
600000
4000
10:22
Today, you can go and experience weightless flights.
186
604000
4000
10:26
By '08, suborbital flights, the price tag for that, you know, on Virgin,
187
608000
4000
10:30
is going to be about 200,000.
188
612000
2000
10:32
There are three or four other serious efforts that will bring the price down very rapidly,
189
614000
3000
10:35
I think, to about 25,000 dollars for a suborbital flight.
190
617000
4000
10:39
Orbital flights -- we can take you to the space station.
191
621000
2000
10:41
And then I truly believe, once a group is in orbit around the Earth --
192
623000
4000
10:45
I know if they don't do it, I am --
193
627000
2000
10:47
we're going to stockpile some fuel,
194
629000
2000
10:49
make a beeline for the moon and grab some real estate.
195
631000
3000
10:52
(Laughter)
196
634000
1000
10:53
Quick moment for the designers in the audience.
197
635000
3000
10:56
We spent 11 years getting FAA approval to do zero gravity flights.
198
638000
4000
11:00
Here are some fun images. Here's Burt Rutan
199
642000
2000
11:02
and my good friend Greg Meronek inside a zero gravity --
200
644000
4000
11:06
people think a zero gravity room,
201
648000
2000
11:08
there's a switch on there that turns it off --
202
650000
2000
11:10
but it's actually parabolic flight of an airplane.
203
652000
2000
11:12
And turns out 7-Up has just done a little commercial that's airing this month.
204
654000
5000
11:17
If we can get the audio up?
205
659000
2000
11:19
(Video) Narrator: For a chance to win the first free ticket to space,
206
661000
4000
11:23
look for specially marked packages of Diet 7-Up.
207
665000
4000
11:27
When you want the taste that won't weigh you down,
208
669000
2000
11:29
the only way to go is up.
209
671000
2000
11:31
PD: That was filmed inside our airplane, and so, you can now do this.
210
673000
5000
11:36
We're based down in Florida.
211
678000
2000
11:38
Let me talk about the other thing I'm excited about.
212
680000
2000
11:40
The future of prizes. You know, prizes are a very old idea.
213
682000
4000
11:44
I had the pleasure of borrowing from the Longitude Prize
214
686000
3000
11:47
and the Orteig Prize that put Lindbergh forward.
215
689000
3000
11:50
And we have made a decision in the X PRIZE Foundation
216
692000
3000
11:53
to actually carry that concept forward into other technology areas,
217
695000
4000
11:57
and we just took on a new mission statement:
218
699000
2000
11:59
"to bring about radical breakthroughs in space
219
701000
3000
12:02
and other technologies for the benefit of humanity."
220
704000
3000
12:05
And this is something that we're very excited about.
221
707000
3000
12:08
I showed this slide to Larry Page, who just joined our board.
222
710000
3000
12:11
And you know, when you give to a nonprofit,
223
713000
2000
12:13
you might have 50 cents on the dollar.
224
715000
2000
12:15
If you have a matching grant, it's typically two or three to one.
225
717000
3000
12:18
If you put up a prize, you can get literally a 50 to one leverage on your dollars.
226
720000
5000
12:23
And that's huge. And then he turned around and said,
227
725000
2000
12:25
"Well, if you back a prize institute that runs a 10 prize, you get 500 to one."
228
727000
4000
12:29
I said, "Well, that's great."
229
731000
2000
12:31
So, we have actually -- are looking to turn the X PRIZE
230
733000
3000
12:34
into a world-class prize institute.
231
736000
3000
12:37
This is what happens when you put up a prize,
232
739000
3000
12:40
when you announce it and teams start to begin doing trials.
233
742000
4000
12:44
You get publicity increase, and when it's won,
234
746000
3000
12:47
publicity shoots through the roof -- if it's properly managed --
235
749000
2000
12:49
and that's part of the benefits to a sponsor.
236
751000
4000
12:53
Then, when the prize is actually won, after it's moving,
237
755000
4000
12:57
you get societal benefits, you know, new technology, new capability.
238
759000
4000
13:01
And the benefit to the sponsors
239
763000
2000
13:03
is the sum of the publicity and societal benefits over the long term.
240
765000
3000
13:06
That's our value proposition in a prize.
241
768000
3000
13:09
If you were going to go and try to create SpaceShipOne,
242
771000
2000
13:11
or any kind of a new technology,
243
773000
2000
13:13
you have to fund that from the beginning
244
775000
3000
13:16
and maintain that funding with an uncertain outcome.
245
778000
3000
13:19
It may or may not happen. But if you put up a prize,
246
781000
3000
13:22
the beautiful thing is, you know, it's a very small maintenance fee,
247
784000
3000
13:25
and you pay on success.
248
787000
2000
13:27
Orteig didn't pay a dime out to the nine teams that went across --
249
789000
2000
13:29
tried to go across the Atlantic,
250
791000
2000
13:31
and we didn't pay a dime until someone won the Ansari X PRIZE.
251
793000
3000
13:34
So, prizes work great.
252
796000
2000
13:36
You know, innovators, the entrepreneurs out there,
253
798000
2000
13:38
you know that when you're going for a goal,
254
800000
2000
13:40
the first thing you have to do is believe
255
802000
2000
13:42
that you can do it yourself.
256
804000
2000
13:44
Then, you've got to, you know, face potential public ridicule
257
806000
2000
13:46
of -- that's a crazy idea, it'll never work.
258
808000
2000
13:48
And then you have to convince others,
259
810000
3000
13:51
so that they can, in fact, help you raise the funds,
260
813000
3000
13:54
and then you've got to deal with the fact that you've got government bureaucracies
261
816000
3000
13:57
and institutions that don't want you to move those things forward,
262
819000
3000
14:00
and you have to deal with failures. What a prize does,
263
822000
2000
14:02
what we've experienced a prize doing,
264
824000
2000
14:04
is literally help to short-circuit or support all of these things,
265
826000
5000
14:09
because a prize credentials the idea that this is a good idea.
266
831000
2000
14:11
Well, it must be a good idea.
267
833000
2000
14:13
Someone's offering 10 million dollars to go and do this thing.
268
835000
3000
14:16
And each of these areas was something that we found
269
838000
3000
14:19
the Ansari X PRIZE helped short-circuit these for innovation.
270
841000
5000
14:24
So, as an organization, we put together a prize discovery process
271
846000
3000
14:27
of how to come up with prizes and write the rules,
272
849000
3000
14:30
and we're actually looking at creating prizes
273
852000
3000
14:33
in a number of different categories.
274
855000
2000
14:35
We're looking at attacking energy, environment, nanotechnology --
275
857000
5000
14:40
and I'll talk about those more in a moment.
276
862000
2000
14:42
And the way we're doing that is we're creating prize teams
277
864000
2000
14:44
within the X PRIZE. We have a space prize team.
278
866000
3000
14:47
We're going after an orbital prize.
279
869000
2000
14:49
We are looking at a number of energy prizes.
280
871000
3000
14:52
Craig Venter has just joined our board
281
874000
2000
14:54
and we're doing a rapid genome sequencing prize with him,
282
876000
2000
14:56
we'll be announcing later this fall,
283
878000
2000
14:58
about -- imagine being able to sequence anybody's DNA
284
880000
4000
15:02
for under 1,000 dollars, revolutionize medicine.
285
884000
3000
15:05
And clean water, education, medicine and even looking at social entrepreneurship.
286
887000
5000
15:10
So my final slide here is, the most critical tool
287
892000
3000
15:13
for solving humanity's grand challenges -- it isn't technology,
288
895000
4000
15:17
it isn't money, it's only one thing --
289
899000
2000
15:19
it's the committed, passionate human mind.
290
901000
3000
15:22
(Applause)
291
904000
4000

▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Peter Diamandis - Space activist
Peter Diamandis runs the X Prize Foundation, which offers large cash incentive prizes to inventors who can solve grand challenges like space flight, low-cost mobile medical diagnostics and oil spill cleanup. He is the chair of Singularity University, which teaches executives and grad students about exponentially growing technologies.

Why you should listen

Watch the live onstage debate with Paul Gilding that followed Peter Diamandis' 2012 TEDTalk >>

Peter Diamandis is the founder and chair of the X Prize Foundation, a nonprofit whose mission is simply "to bring about radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity." By offering a big cash prize for a specific accomplishment, the X Prize stimulates competition and excitement around some of the planet's most important goals. Diamandis is also co-founder and chairman of Singularity University which runs Exponential Technologies Executive and Graduate Student Programs.

Diamandis' background is in space exploration -- before the X Prize, he ran a company that studied low-cost launching technologies and Zero-G which offers the public the chance to train like an astronaut and experience weightlessness. But though the X Prize's first $10 million went to a space-themed challenge, Diamandis' goal now is to extend the prize into health care, social policy, education and many other fields that could use a dose of competitive innovation.

More profile about the speaker
Peter Diamandis | Speaker | TED.com

Data provided by TED.

This site was created in May 2015 and the last update was on January 12, 2020. It will no longer be updated.

We are currently creating a new site called "eng.lish.video" and would be grateful if you could access it.

If you have any questions or suggestions, please feel free to write comments in your language on the contact form.

Privacy Policy

Developer's Blog

Buy Me A Coffee