Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt and billionaire Co-founder Larry Page have teamed up with “Avatar” director James Cameron and other investors to back an ambitious space exploration and natural resources venture.
The fledgling company, called Planetary Resources, will be unveiled at a Tuesday news conference at the Museum of Flight in Seattle.
The company will combine the sectors of “space exploration and natural resources” in a venture that could add “trillions of dollars to the global GDP.”
Planetary Resources will explore the feasibility of mining natural resources from asteroids, a decades-old concept.
This innovative start-up will create a new industry and a new definition of natural resources, as Reuters stated.
Planetary Resource was co-founded by Eric Anderson, a former NASA Mars mission manager, and Peter Diamandis, the commercial space entrepreneur behind the X-Prize, a competition that offered $10 million to a group that launched a reusable manned spacecraft.
Other notable investors include Charles Simonyi, a former top executive at Microsoft, and K. Ram Shriram, a Google director.
The venture will be the latest foray into the far-flung for Cameron, who was diving last month in a mini-submarine to the deepest spot in the Mariana Trench.
The plot of his 2009 science fiction blockbuster film, “Avatar,” concerned resource mining on alien planets.