Step Aside, Bruce Willis: The U.S. Government Has a Plan to Save Earth From Asteroids

In the 1998 space thriller Armageddon -- now ensconced in the American zeitgeist -- NASA turns to a veteran oil driller, played by Bruce Willis, to help blow apart an incoming asteroid before it can destroy life on Earth. Twenty years later, the U.S. government has a different plan for saving Earth from asteroids.

And last month, President Donald Trump told us about it.

Artist's rendering of a meteor exploding over a city in a flash of light.
Artist's rendering of a meteor exploding over a city in a flash of light.

A large meteor strike on Earth could be an extinction-level event -- and the government would like to avoid that. Image source: Getty Images.

What's the fuss?

Asteroid strikes have captured the public's attention as potential extinction-level events in recent years, but how big a deal is the asteroid threat, really?

According to U.S. government estimates, Earth is surrounded in space by some 10 million near-Earth objects (NEOs) of 20 meters or more in diameter. There are countless more NEOs of smaller size, and many that are larger (and thus more destructive). But to provide a bit of context, 20 meters was the size of the meteor (once an asteroid enters Earth's atmosphere, we call it a meteor) that exploded in the skies over Chelyabinsk, Russia, on Feb. 15, 2013. That explosion created an airburst releasing more than 20 times the energy released by the atomic bomb that leveled Hiroshima.

So how big does that make the asteroid threat? Well, 10 million multiplied by 20 equals a total combined threat level about 200 million times bigger than Hiroshima -- which I'd say makes it pretty significant. Worse, the government laments that with current technology, it's almost impossible to detect asteroids 20 meters in diameter or smaller before they enter Earth's atmosphere. The Chelyabinsk meteor, for example, took Russia entirely by surprise.

Us versus the asteroids

The National Science and Technology Council's plan to deal with this threat -- technically called the National Near-Earth Object Preparedness Strategy and Action Plan -- was announced by President Trump's office on June 20, 2018.

This 23-page report details a 10-year plan to "improve our Nation's preparedness to address the hazard of NEO impacts." Basically, it breaks down into five key objectives:

  1. Improve our detection of asteroids that could threaten Earth.

  2. Improve our computer models to better predict whether a given asteroid will threaten Earth.

  3. Develop technologies to neutralize that threat.

  4. Increase international cooperation on points 1 through 3.

  5. And drill, baby, drill! (That is, conduct exercises to prepare to meet an NEO threat -- not drill holes and drop nuclear weapons into them.)