Survivalist market

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Revision as of 11:08, 28 August 2009 by Vincecate (talk | contribs) (Defense)
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There are survivalists who would like a home that could have a good chance of surviving various potential disasters like breakdown of society, nuclear war, disease outbreaks, etc. A Single Family Seastead with a few extras should be able to serve this part of the seastead market.

Food

A seasteader could get their own food by fishing, hydroponics, storage, and maybe aquaculture. A seastead should act as a Fish Aggregating Device so it will probably be easy to catch plenty of fish for one family. Watermakers are easy enough. A supply of hydroponics nutrients to last many years is not very large (most of the mass of food comes from water and the carbon in the air). Food storage food is also very reasonably priced and small enough to fit on a seastead.

Disease

A seastead could stay isolated from other human or animal contact to make it impossible for many types of contagious diseases to get to it.

Power

Solar panels can provide power for 25+ years. Costs are now down to around $2/watt. Could have a very small generator as a backup.

Propulsion

Solar would be enough power for electric thrusters if we use efficient propellers. Might also use a kite and sea-anchor. You can get a 500 lbs thruster that uses about 2,000 watts. If you only drove when the sun was up and used $2/watt panels, that is about $4,000 worth of solar panels. Probably you want batteries and several times that in solar panels.

Defense

A survivalist on a seastead out in the deep ocean sort of has a big moat around him making attack from hungry people trying to get the survivalists food less of a problem. In a post apocalyptic scenario the number of people that could still travel across the deep ocean and be a threat to a seastead would be much smaller than the number of people on land. Also, with radar or other sensors you can see a threat coming when it is still far away. Defending against a pirate attack that you see coming should work well. Most pirates seem to break off an attack if there are any guns firing at them.

A usual survivalist shelter is a hole in the ground. An attacker could get very close without being seen. If they make a smoky fire by the air-intake for the shelter the people inside can be killed. Then they can break the door and take the food. So a typical shelter may not really be nearly as defensible as a seastead.

Market size

It is not clear how many survivalists would be interested in buying a seastead. This would depend on how much seasteads costs. But even a small market segment could help with initial sales of seasteads.

Conclusions

A seastead can be a great platform for a survivalist. It can be equipped such that a family could live for years without needing any resupply of any kind. It is probably a more secure situation than a land based home where hungry people may attack at any time. Seasteads should appeal to survivalists.