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Elon Musk Denies New York Times Report Suggesting He Volunteered His Sperm to Seed a Colony on Mars

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2024-07-18 17:59:12969browse

The July 11 report suggested that Musk had quietly directed his team to begin planning an off-world habitat that could survive Mars' hostile environment.

Elon Musk Denies New York Times Report Suggesting He Volunteered His Sperm to Seed a Colony on Mars

Elon Musk has denied claims he volunteered his sperm to help seed a colony on Mars.

The New York Times report on July 11 suggested that Musk had quietly directed his team to begin planning an off-world habitat that could survive the hostile Martian environment.

One team is reportedly looking at plans for “small dome habitats,” including materials that could be used to build them. Another is working on spacesuits that could survive Mars’ freezing extraterrestrial climate, which is made up of 95% carbon dioxide and only 0.13% oxygen. A third team is researching whether humans could have children there.

The report cited “two people familiar with his comments” who said Musk “volunteered his sperm to help seed a colony.”

However, Musk has since denied these claims in a response to a post that shared the article on X.

“Best to hear it in the words I have used in many interviews over the years. I have not fwiw ‘volunteered my sperm,'” said Musk. 

Despite Musk’s denial on his social media platform X, the rumor has continued to spread rapidly across news desks and social media.

Musk reportedly told employees he plans to build a city of one million people on Mars by 2050.

Earlier, Musk shared his eventual goal would be to launch an average of three starships per day, or 1,000 flights per year.

Musk also once hinted he could see Bitcoin ( BTC ) $57,153 being used as a form of currency on Mars, although he was initially dismissive of the idea.

BTC

$57,153

In an X Spaces in January, Musk initially shot down using Bitcoin as a currency on Mars due to the significant time it takes to settle transactions.

However, after verbally brainstorming by himself, Musk concluded it might actually be feasible given Earth is only eight light minutes from the sun while Mars is approximately 12 light minutes—although it would still face obstacles.

“Perhaps you can use Bitcoin to some degree, but it would be difficult to use it a lot on Mars,” he stated, adding the potential need for a localized network on the planet.

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