Theemile wrote:Galactic Sapper wrote:I'm not even approaching it from a defensive standpoint. Strictly from an economic standpoint they make no sense. Despite being settled that long they didn't have an overcrowding problem to the point where that much residential capacity was needed to be located in space simply because there was no room on the surface for them any more. Earth might have had that problem - maybe - but not anywhere else.
Nor do they have the reason somewhere like Grayson does: an existential threat by the planetary environment. There it would make sense to move large numbers of the population off the surface and they didn't because they couldn't afford to.
Nor were the orbital habitats dedicated to industries that needed access to space or to the support systems needed to run those industries. Manticore's habitats were; so were things like Blackbird and the Bolthole stations. Beowulf Alpha seems to be nothing more than a really freaking expensive unnecessary city in space for no particular reason.
The whole discussion revolves back to the discussion of what the 300 Million people in Manticore B space do. Originally, it was assumed that many were on Weyland - nope, only about 1.5 million or so. Do they build ships - no - all the shipyards in Manticore B space were at Weyland. Factory workers? - no - industry was also focused at Weyland. We know some work in Ore extraction - but a study showed that fewer than 20 million people on Earth directly work at ore extraction, and less than 70 million are directly employed in the industry world wide - for a 21th century tech planet with 2x the population of Manticore - Total.
So what do the rest of the 300 million do? Adult entertainment and Medical support for the mining ops? Telemarketers? (that would explain the long pause before people answer...)
Mostly in ore extraction and refinement and supporting that, I'd assume. Say 5 million work directly in ore extraction - that is, directly on the ships extracting ores and transporting the ore to nodal refiners. Another 5 million work directly on refining and transporting metals to end users.
But keep in mind the nodal stations aren't just "mining camps". They're not hardship positions like today's offshore oil platforms. They're small mining cities, and mostly self sufficient. That means millions more working upkeep on the mining ships. Support services for the miners. Dependents of the miners. Support services for the dependents. Station crew to maintain the physical plant supporting all those supporters.
It's basically what they say about today's military: it takes ten people working behind the scenes in theater to keep one guy on the front lines. Then it takes another 5 people working stateside to keep each of those support workers supplied in theater. Today's mining towns often have 10 to 1 ratios - ten people in the town for each person working in the mine. And that's without needing to have people running the air and water recyclers, the hydroponic gardens, and most of the support machinery supplied from out of town. It's pretty easy to see how 10 million people working directly in asteroid mining could require a 20 or 25 to 1 ratio and account for most of the space-based population.
And that makes economic sense, because those platforms are far enough away from the planet that supporting them from the planet would take hours each way. No one wants to spend 4 hours each way every weekend to spend time with their family, at least not on a long-term basis. A year contract, maybe, but not as a career. From what we've seen of Weyland, only a few tens of thousands on the station were probably directly employed in research, shipbuilding, or manufacturing. The rest were there as support work.
None of this seems to have applied to Beowulf Alpha. There doesn't seem to have been a major industry that needed to be in space being supported by that massive population. To be fair there were some things on Hephaestus that couldn't be reasonably justified, such as corporate offices. No matter how cheap space construction is it can't possibly compete with groundside real estate without some overriding reason why it must be in space.