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The issue is, of course, when you start bringing back THAT many rare materials, the value can and will plummet.
If they locate a convenient asteorid rich in platinum group metals then it may return some profit. For example rhodium costs ~80 000 $/kg, platinum ~50 000 $/kg, gold ~40 000 $/kg. Bring back few dozen tons and you could earn several billion. Big question is would it be enough to pay for the mining operation and how much metals could be added to market without crashing it.
Maybe use leftover less valuable metals like iron and aluminium to construct a solar power sattelites (at least the low tech parts and bring only expensive high end components from Earth)
Suppose they could construct 1 GW solar power sattelite and sell the power for 0,1 $/kwh, that would earn ~800 million $ per year.
Maybe also provide refueling an repair services to companies owning comercial sattelites to extend their lifetime.
Yes, but even if their value plummets, an abundance of otherwise rare and expensive materials would open up possibilities in industry and technological developments that are hampered by those very issues.
But if you want to make money by mining asteroids, you're going to make it by selling whatever you mine, not enriching technology development. The fields you'd affect are just so wide-ranging and taken up by so many different companies in so many different parts of the world that you couldn't possibly profit off of a considerable amount of it.
Or a change of availability of resources.
Either way the future becomes as interesting as almost never before. And I expect to still be around in 60 years from now. I'm curious how the world is going to look like...
Yeah, that is huge unknown. Especially since technology to mine and refine mined metals in space don't exist at all. I guess there would be a steep learning curve and many failures before a first succesful prototype asteorid miner is developed. And before asteorid mining could begin they would have to survey multiple asteorids to get an idea what kind of metals and in what concentrations are there which would require multiple space probes.Depends on how much the mining operation costs to develop and operate, which is a huge variable. Considering that nothing quite like it has ever been done before, odds are it won't be cheap, at least to start with. What is the kind of concentration of something like rhodium or platinum in an asteroid? How much work do you have to do to extract it?

Their public announcement is going to be live streamed here in less than two hours.
Their public announcement is going to be live streamed here in less than two hours.
mostly motivated by vision, which is I think an absolutely necessary foundation for a venture this ambitious.
The Catch 22 is, of course, that asteroid (and lunar) mining *requires* a developed space manufacturing infrastructure to be feasible.
if it were possible for small companies like Reaction Engines Ltd with their low cost (comparatively) Skylon project to become involved, this would be fantastic for the human endeavour into the heavens.