-
Chris Anderson: So two months ago,
something crazy happened.
-
Can you talk us through this, because
this caught so many people's attention?
-
Gwynne Shotwell: I'll stay quiet
for the beginning,
-
and then I'll start talking.
-
(Video) Voices: Five, four,
three, two, one.
-
(Cheering)
-
Woman: Liftoff. Go Falcon Heavy.
-
GS: So this was such
an important moment for SpaceX.
-
With the Falcon 9
and now the Falcon Heavy,
-
we can launch into orbit
-
any payload that has previously
been conceived or is conceived right now.
-
We've got a couple of launches
of Falcon Heavy later this year,
-
so this had to go right.
-
It was the first time we flew it,
-
and the star of the show, of course,
-
brother and sister side boosters landing.
-
I was excited.
-
(Laughter)
-
Thanking my team.
-
By the way, there's maybe
a thousand people
-
standing around me right there.
-
And Starman.
-
Starman did not steal the show, though --
-
the boosters did.
-
CA: (Laughter)
-
CA: There had to be some payload --
why not put a Tesla into space?
-
GS: Exactly. It was perfect.
-
CA: Gwynne, let's wind the clock back.
-
I mean, how did you end up an engineer
and President of SpaceX?
-
Were you supernerdy as a girl?
-
GS: I don't think I was nerdy,
-
but I was definitely doing the things
that the girls weren't doing.
-
I asked my mom, who was an artist,
when I was in third grade,
-
how a car worked,
-
so she had no idea so she gave me
a book, and I read it,
-
and sure enough, my first job
out of my mechanical engineering degree
-
was with Chrysler Motors
in the automotive industry.
-
But I actually got into engineering
not because of that book
-
but because my mom took me
to a Society of Women Engineers event,
-
and I fell in love with
the mechanical engineer that spoke.
-
She was doing really critical work,
-
and I loved her suit.
-
(Laughter)
-
And that's what a 15-year-old
girl connects with.
-
And I used to shy away
from telling that story,
-
but if that's what caused me
to be an engineer --
-
hey, I think we should talk about that.
-
CA: Sixteen years ago, you became
employee number seven at SpaceX,
-
and then over the next years,
-
you somehow built a multi-billion-dollar
relationship with NASA,
-
despite the fact that SpaceX's
first three launches blew up.
-
I mean, how on earth did you do that?
-
GS: So actually, selling rockets
is all about relationships
-
and making a connection
with these customers.
-
When you don't have a rocket to sell,
-
what's really important
is selling your team,
-
selling the business savvy of your CEO --
-
that's not really hard
to sell these days --
-
and basically, making sure
that any technical issue that they have
-
or any concern,
you can address right away.
-
So I think it was helpful
for me to be an engineer.
-
I think it was helpful to my role
of running sales for Elon.
-
CA: And currently,
a big focus of the company
-
is, I guess, kind of a race with Boeing
-
to be the first to provide
the service to NASA
-
of actually putting humans into orbit.
-
Safety considerations obviously
come to the fore, here.
-
How are you sleeping?
-
GS: I actually sleep really well.
I'm a good sleeper, that's my best thing.
-
But I think the days leading up
to our flying crew
-
will probably be a little sleepless.
-
But really, fundamentally,
safety comes in the design
-
of the system that you're going
to fly people on,
-
and so we've been working for years,
-
actually, almost a decade,
on this technology.
-
We're taking the Dragon cargo spaceship
-
and we're upgrading it
to be able to carry crew.
-
And as I said, we've been
engineering in these safety systems
-
for quite some time.
-
CA: So isn't it that there's one system
that actually allows instant escape
-
if there's a problem.
-
GS: That's right. It's called
the launch escape system.
-
CA: I think we have that. Let's show that.
-
GS: We've got a video
of a test that we ran in 2015.
-
So this simulated having
a really bad day on the pad.
-
Basically, you want the capsule
to get out of Dodge.
-
You want it to get away from the rocket
-
that had a bad day right below it.
-
This is if there was an issue on the pad.
-
We also will be doing
another demonstration later this year
-
on if we have an issue
with the rocket during flight.
-
CA: And those rockets have another
potential function as well, eventually.
-
GS: Yeah, so the launch escape system
for Dragon is pretty unique.
-
It's an integrated launch escape system.
-
It's basically a pusher,
-
so the propellant system and the thrusters
are integrated into the capsule,
-
and so if it detects a rocket problem,
it pushes the capsule away.
-
Capsule safety systems in the past
have been like tractor pullers,
-
and the reason we didn't want to do that
-
is that puller needs to come off before
you can safely reenter that capsule,
-
so we wanted to eliminate, in design,
that possibility of failure.
-
CA: I mean, SpaceX has made
the regular reusability of rockets
-
seem almost routine,
-
which means you've done something
-
that no national
space program, for example,
-
has been able to achieve.
-
How was that possible?
-
GS: I think there's a couple of things --
-
there's a million things, actually --
-
that have allowed SpaceX to be successful.
-
The first is that we're kind of standing
on the shoulders of giants. Right?
-
We got to look at the rocket industry
and the developments to date,
-
and we got to pick the best ideas,
-
leverage them.
-
We also didn't have technology
that we had to include
-
in our vehicle systems.
-
So we didn't have to design
around legacy components
-
that maybe weren't the most reliable
or were particularly expensive,
-
so we really were able to let physics
drive the design of these systems.
-
CA: I mean, there are other programs
started from scratch.
-
That last phrase you said there,
you let physics drive the design,
-
what's an example of that?
-
GS: There's hundreds of examples,
actually, of that,
-
but basically, we got to construct
the vehicle design
-
from, really, a clean sheet of paper,
-
and we got to make decisions
that we wanted to make.
-
The tank architecture --
it's a common dome design.
-
Basically it's like two beer cans
stacked together,
-
one full of liquid oxygen,
-
one full of RP,
-
and that basically saved weight.
-
It allowed us to basically take
more payload for the same design.
-
One of the other elements of the vehicle
that we're flying right now
-
is we do use densified
liquid oxygen and densified RP,
-
so it's ultracold,
-
and it allows you to pack
more propellent into the vehicle.
-
It is done elsewhere,
-
probably not to the degree that we do it,
-
but it adds a lot
of margin to the vehicle,
-
which obviously adds reliability.
-
CA: Gwynne, you became President
of SpaceX 10 years ago, I think.
-
What's it been like to work
so closely with Elon Musk?
-
GS: So I love working for Elon.
-
I've been doing it for 16 years
this year, actually.
-
I don't think I'm dumb enough
to do something for 16 years
-
that I don't like doing.
-
He's funny
-
and fundamentally without
him saying anything
-
he drives you to do your best work.
-
He doesn't have to say a word.
-
You just want to do great work.
-
CA: You might be the person
best placed to answer this question,
-
which has puzzled me,
-
which is to shed light
on this strange unit of time
-
called "Elon time."
-
For example, last year,
I asked Elon, you know,
-
when Tesla would
auto-drive across America,
-
and he said by last December,
-
which is definitely true,
if you take Elon time into account.
-
So what's the conversion ratio
between Elon time and real time?
-
(Laughter)
-
GS: You put me
in a unique position, Chris.
-
Thanks for that.
-
There's no question that Elon
is very aggressive on his timelines,
-
but frankly, that drives us
to do things better and faster.
-
I think all the time
and all the money in the world
-
does not yield the best solution,
-
and so putting that pressure on the team
to move quickly is really important.
-
CA: It feels like you play
kind of a key intermediary role here.
-
I mean, he sets these crazy goals
that have their impact,
-
but, in other circumstances,
might blow up a team
-
or set impossible expectations.
-
It feels like you've found a way
of saying, "Yes, Elon,"
-
and then making it happen
in a way that is acceptable
-
both to him and to your company,
to your employees.
-
GS: There is two really important
realizations for that.
-
First of all, when Elon says something,
you have to pause
-
and not immediately blurt out,
"Well, that's impossible,"
-
or, "There's no way we're going
to do that. I don't know how."
-
So you zip it, and you think about it,
-
and you find ways to get that done.
-
And the other thing I realized,
-
and it made my job satisfaction
substantially harder.
-
So I always felt like my job
was to take these ideas
-
and kind of turn them into company goals,
make them achievable,
-
and kind of roll the company over
from this steep slope, get it comfortable.
-
And I noticed every time
I felt like we were there,
-
we were rolling over,
people were getting comfortable,
-
Elon would throw something out there,
-
and all of a sudden, we're not comfortable
-
and we're climbing that steep slope again.
-
But then once I realized
that that's his job,
-
and my job is to get the company
close to comfortable
-
so he can push again
and put us back on that slope,
-
then I started liking my job a lot more,
-
instead of always being frustrated.
-
CA: So if I estimated
that the conversation ratio
-
for Elon time to your time is about 2x,
-
am I a long way out there?
-
GS: That's not terrible,
and you said it, I didn't.
-
(Laughter)
-
CA: You know, looking ahead,
-
one huge initiative
-
SpaceX is believed to be,
rumored to be working on,
-
is a massive network of literally
thousands of low earth orbit satellites
-
to provide high-bandwidth,
low-cost internet connection
-
to every square foot of planet earth.
-
Is there anything
you can tell us about this?
-
GS: We actually don't chat very much
about this particular project,
-
not because we're hiding anything,
-
but this is probably
one of the most challenging
-
if not the most challenging
project we've undertaken.
-
No one has been successful
-
deploying a huge constellation
for internet broadband,
-
or basically for satellite internet,
-
and I don't think physics
is the difficulty here.
-
I think we can come up
with the right technology solution,
-
but we need to make a business out of it,
-
and it'll cost the company
about 10 billion dollars or more
-
to deploy this system.
-
And so we're marching steadily along
-
but we're certainly
not claiming victory yet.
-
CA: I mean, the impact of that,
obviously, if that happened to the world,
-
of connectivity everywhere,
would be pretty radical,
-
and perhaps mainly for good --
-
I mean, it changes a lot
if suddenly everyone can connect cheaply.
-
GS: Yeah, there's no question
it'll change the world.
-
CA: How much of a worry is it,
-
and how much of a drag
on the planning is it,
-
are concerns just about space junk?
-
People worry a lot about this.
-
This would a huge increase in the total
number of satellites in orbit.
-
Is that a concern?
-
GS: So space debris is a concern,
there's no question --
-
not because it's so likely to happen,
-
but the consequences of it happening
are pretty devastating.
-
You could basically spew
a bunch of particles in orbit
-
that could take out that orbit
from being useful for decades or longer.
-
So as a matter of fact,
-
we are required to bring down
our second stage after every mission
-
so it doesn't end up being
a rocket carcass orbiting earth.
-
So you really need to be
a good steward of that.
-
CA: So despite
the remarkable success there
-
of that Falcon Heavy rocket,
-
you're actually not focusing on that
as your future development plan.
-
You're doubling down
to a much bigger rocket
-
called the BFR,
-
which stands for ...
-
GS: It's the Big Falcon Rocket.
CA: The Big Falcon Rocket, that's right.
-
(Laughter)
-
What's the business logic of doing this
-
when you invested all that
in that incredible technology,
-
and now you're just going
to something much bigger. Why?
-
GS: Actually, we've learned some lessons
-
over the duration where we've
been developing these launch systems.
-
What we want to do is not introduce
a new product before we've been able
-
to convince the customers that this
is the product that they should move to,
-
so we're working on
the Big Falcon Rocket now,
-
but we're going to continue
flying Falcon 9s and Falcon Heavies
-
until there is absolute
widespread acceptance of BFR.
-
But we are working on it right now,
-
we're just not going to cancel
Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy
-
and just put in place BFR.
-
CA: The logic is that BFR is what you need
to take humanity to Mars?
-
GS: That's correct.
-
CA: But somehow, you've also found
other business ideas for this.
-
GS: Yes. BFR can take the satellites
that we're currently taking to orbit
-
to many orbits.
-
It allows for even a new class
of satellites to be delivered to orbit.
-
Basically, the width, the diameter
of the fairing is eight meters,
-
so you can think about
what giant telescopes
-
you can put in that fairing,
in that cargo bay,
-
and see really incredible things
-
and discover incredible things in space.
-
But then there are some
residual capabilities
-
that we have out of BFR as well.
-
CA: A residual capability?
GS: It's a residual capability.
-
CA: Is that what you call this?
Talk about what the heck this is.
-
Oh wait a sec --
-
GS: That's Falcon Heavy.
-
That's worth pointing out, by the way.
-
What a beautiful rocket,
-
and that hangar could just fit
the Statue of Liberty in it,
-
so you get a sense of size
of that Falcon Heavy Rocket.
-
CA: And the fact that
there are 27 engines there.
-
That's part of the design principle
-
that you, rather than just
inventing ever bigger rockets,
-
you team them up.
-
GS: It's exactly this residual capability.
-
We developed the Merlin engine
for the Falcon 1 launch vehicle.
-
We could have tossed that engine
-
and built an entirely new engine
for the Falcon 9.
-
It would have been called
something different,
-
because Falcon 9 is nine Merlin engines,
-
but instead of spending a billion dollars
on a brand new engine,
-
we put nine of them together
on the back end of Falcon 9.
-
Residual capability:
glue three Falcon 9s together
-
and you have the largest
operational rocket flying.
-
And so it was expensive to do,
-
but it was a much more efficient path
than starting from scratch.
-
CA: And the BFR is the equivalent
of how much bigger than that,
-
in terms of its power?
-
GS: BFR is about, I believe,
two and half times the size of this.
-
CA: Right, and so that allows you --
-
I mean, I still don't really believe
this video that we're about to play here.
-
What on earth is this?
-
GS: So it currently is on earth,
-
but this is basically
space travel for earthlings.
-
I can't wait for this residual capability.
-
Basically, what we're going to do
is we're going to fly BFR like an aircraft
-
and do point-to-point travel on earth,
-
so you can take off
from New York City or Vancouver
-
and fly halfway across the globe.
-
You'll be on the BFR for roughly
half an hour or 40 minutes,
-
and the longest part --
yeah, it's so awesome.
-
(Applause)
-
The longest part of that flight
is actually the boat out and back.
-
(Laughter)
-
GS: I mean. Gwynne, come on,
this is awesome, but it's crazy, right?
-
This is never going to actually happen.
-
GS: Oh no, it's definitely
going to happen.
-
This is definitely going to happen.
-
CA: How?
-
(Applause)
-
So first of all, countries are going
to accept this incoming missile --
-
(Laughter)
-
GS: Chris, so can you imagine
us trying to convince a federal range,
-
Air Force bases to take the incomers?
-
Because we're doing it now,
regularly, right?
-
We're bringing the first stages back,
-
and we're landing them
on federal property on an Air Force base.
-
So I think doing it, I don't know,
-
10 kilometers out from a city, maybe
it's only five kilometers out from a city.
-
CA: So how many passengers
can possibly afford the fortune
-
of flying by space?
-
GS: So the first BFR is going to have
roughly a hundred passengers.
-
And let's talk a little bit
about the business.
-
Everyone thinks rockets
are really expensive,
-
and to a large degree they are,
-
and how could we possibly compete
with airline tickets here?
-
But if you think about it,
if I can do this trip
-
in half an hour to an hour,
-
I can do dozens of these a day, right?
-
And yet, a long-haul aircraft
can only make one of those flights a day.
-
So even if my rocket
was slightly more expensive
-
and the fuel is
a little bit more expensive,
-
I can run 10x at least
what they're running in a day,
-
and really make the revenue
that I need to out of that system.
-
CA: So you really believe this is going
to be deployed at some point
-
in our amazing future. When?
-
GS: Within a decade, for sure.
-
CA: And this is Gwynne time or Elon time?
-
CA: That's Gwynne time.
I'm sure Elon will want us to go faster.
-
(Laughter)
-
CA: OK, that's certainly amazing.
-
(Laughter)
-
GS: I'm personally invested in this one,
because I travel a lot
-
and I do not love to travel,
-
and I would love to get to see
my customers in Riyadh,
-
leave in the morning
and be back in time to make dinner.
-
CA: So we're going to test this out.
-
So within 10 years,
an economy price ticket,
-
or, like, a couple thousand dollars
per person to fly New York to Shanghai.
-
GS: Yeah, I think it'll be between
economy and business,
-
but you do it in an hour.
-
CA: Yeah, well, OK,
that is definitely something.
-
(Laughter)
-
And meanwhile, the other use
of BFR is being developed
-
to go a little bit further than Shanghai.
-
Talk about this.
-
You guys have actually developed
quite a detailed, sort of, picture
-
of how humans might fly to Mars,
-
and what that would look like.
-
GS: Yeah. So we've got a video,
this is a cropped video
-
from others we've shown, and then
there's a couple of new bits to it.
-
But basically, you're going
to lift off from a pad,
-
you've got a booster as well as the BFS,
the Big Falcon Spaceship.
-
It's going to take off.
-
The booster is going to drop
the spaceship off in orbit,
-
low earth orbit,
-
and then return just like
we're returning boosters right now.
-
So it sounds incredible,
but we're working on the pieces,
-
and you can see us achieve these pieces.
-
So booster comes back.
-
The new thing here
-
is that we're going to actually land
on the pad that we launched from.
-
Currently, we land on a separate pad,
or we land out on a boat.
-
Fast, quick connect.
-
You take a cargo ship full of fuel,
-
or a fuel depot,
-
put it on that booster, get that in orbit,
-
do a docking maneuver,
refuel the spaceship,
-
and head on to your destination,
-
and this one is Mars.
-
CA: So, like, a hundred people
go to Mars at one time,
-
taking, what, six months? Two months?
-
GS: It ends up depending
on how big the rocket is.
-
I think this first version,
and we'll continue to make
-
even bigger BFRs,
-
I think it's a three-month trip.
-
Right now, the average is six to eight,
-
but we're going to try to do it faster.
-
CA: When do you believe SpaceX
will land the first human on Mars?
-
GS: It's a very similar time frame
from the point-to-point.
-
It's the same capability.
-
It will be within a decade --
not this decade.
-
CA: In real time, again, within a decade.
-
Well, that would also be amazing.
-
(Laughter)
-
Why, though? Seriously, why?
-
I mean, you've got a company
where this is the official stated mission.
-
Has everyone actually
bought into that mission,
-
given that, I mean,
there's a lot of people around
-
who think, come on,
you've got so much talent,
-
so much technology capability.
-
There are so many things on earth
that need urgent attention.
-
Why would you have this escape trip
off to another planet?
-
(Applause)
-
GS: So I am glad you asked that,
-
but I think we need
to expand our minds a little bit.
-
There are plenty of things to do on earth,
-
but there are lots of companies
working on that.
-
I think we're working on one of
the most important things we possibly can,
-
and that's to find another place
for humans to live and survive and thrive.
-
If something happened on earth,
-
you need humans living somewhere else.
-
(Applause)
-
It's the fundamental risk reduction
for the human species.
-
And this does not subvert
-
making our planet here better
and doing a better job taking care of it,
-
but I think you need
multiple paths to survival,
-
and this is one of them.
-
And let's not talk about the downer piece,
-
like, you go to Mars to make sure
all earthlings don't die.
-
That's terrible, actually,
that's a terrible reason to go do it.
-
Fundamentally,
it's another place to explore,
-
and that's what makes humans
different from animals,
-
it's our sense of exploration
and sense of wonderment
-
and learning something new.
-
And then I also have to say,
-
this is the first step
in us moving to other solar systems
-
and potentially other galaxies,
-
and I think this is the only time
I ever out-vision Elon,
-
because I want to meet other people
in other solar systems.
-
Mars is fine, but it is
a fixer-upper planet.
-
There's work to do there
to make it habitable.
-
(Laughter)
-
I want to find people,
or whatever they call themselves,
-
in another solar system.
-
CA: That is a big vision.
-
Gwynne Shotwell, thank you.
-
You have one of the most
amazing jobs on the planet.
-
GS: Thank you very much. Thanks, Chris.
Yasushi Aoki
15:13 GS: I mean. Gwynne, come on,
# GS -> CA
16:44 CA: That's Gwynne time.
# CA -> GS