If we actually terraform our way out of earth, what next?
- We get a new home
- A temporary satisfaction to our urge for modular expansion
- Potential technological and biological breakthroughs
- We get to say “I told you so” to the pragmatists and pessimists that said it couldn’t be done. Etcetera.
But is that really all to it?
In 1957, Sputnik 1, the first artificial satellite, was launched into space. In 1969, the first man landed on the moon. In 1971, space exploration reached as far as MARS - where NASA recorded its first successful soft-landing. Fast-forward to 2025, now we have reusable space rockets and orbiting space stations.
Humanity never stopped, Technology never retracted. They kept growing… changing… evolving… and suddenly, terraforming a whole ass planet didn’t seem so impossible anymore.
Humanity has always been a species with wandering feet and an existential need to poke at the edges of an illusional map. We did it when we made ships and crossed oceans. We did it when we made wings to sore the skies. We did it again when we decided to break out of the exosphere on a spaceship.
And slowly but surely, our ambitions shifted from just “visiting Mars” to “remaking Mars”. And this ambition gradually got split into two radically different paths — Terraformation and Paraterraforming.
What is Terraformation?
In simple terms, “Transforming/Engineering an entire planet’s environment to bear Earth-like similarities, ie. closely suitable for human survival”.
Think Mars, The Moon, or Europa (Jupiter’s moon).
What is Paraterraformation?
Domes, shells, and megastructures - Paraterraformation involves building contained, controlled habitats on alien worlds (or on orbit) to create an Earth-friendly (imitate) environment - which, therefore, eliminates the need for modifying the entire planet.
The Differences?
One is cosmic-scale geoengineering… The other is controlled, dome-based engineering.
One is a dream… One is a plan.
Both have hype… Only one has a return on investment.
Stick around till the end, let’s unpack these two competing multiplanetary visions together…
THE DREAM : Humanity’s Thirst to Transform New Worlds
Terraforming
Terraforming is the ultimate act of planetary flexing: changing the atmosphere, climate, temperature, and biosphere of an entire world until it’s basically a big, round Airbnb for humans.
We’ve been fantasizing about this for decades:
- H.G. Wells imagined planetary modification
- Arthur C. Clarke’s engineered climates dream
- Sci-fi games turned barren planets into lush paradises
- Williamson, Carl Sagan, Christopher Mckay, Isaac Asimov, you name it. They all had a thing or two to say/contribute to the cause.
Even up till today, we still have the likes of Elon, you, and I who dares to hold onto that dream.
All through-and-through, terraforming became a symbol — not just of survival, but of cosmic dominance.
Paraterraforming
A more grounded dream to former. An appease to the pragmatists who choose reason over dreams - and I mean, they’re not wrong (completely).
Paraterraforming, at first glance, may seem less glamorous and more sane— just floating domes, shells, underground habitats, orbital megastructures.
But taking closer look, these concepts lookhyper-futuristic as h3ll.
Imagine glowing city domes on Mars, underground neon caverns carved into lunar lava tubes, asteroid habitats rotating like cosmic cruise liners - and then tiny creatures known as humans walking, procreating, and socializing at the very base of it.
It’s the cyberpunk versionof settlement.
The ironic bubble-burster? Paraterraforming is likely more feasible than the Terraforming dreams of Jack Williamson and Co.
Why Do We Dream At All?
Deep down, at the heart of it, it’s the same instinct that pushed ancient civilizations to build ships and sail into unknown seas. It’s still the same drive that fueled the Wright Brothers, and it’s that same urge that fuels each one of us till date.
What do we want?
- A backup plan
- Adventure
- Survival
- Meaning
- A story larger than Earth and humanity itself; and everyone wants to be a part of what wrote that story.
That dream is what fuels both terraforming and paraterraforming — even if only one survives scientific scrutiny (for now).
THE SCIENCE : Actions Speaks Louder Than Dreams
Terraforming… Paraterraforming… they all sound amazing till you actually realize what it entails.
Let’s look at it from the pragmatist’s eyes…
Terraforming
Recall: Terraforming means Planetary Reengineering to resemble our very own, Earth.
For this to happen, we’ll need a few things in place:
- Atmosphere presence
- Proximity to the Sun
- Hydrological cycle/Water availability
- Global climate engineering (ie. Favorable weather)
- Magnetosphere/ Magnetic field factor
- Breathable air
- Presence of solid land (since we’re not fishes)
- Biological integration and presence
And so far, no other planets or bodies has successfully checked all boxes.
So in other words:
Terraforming is “Earth engineering” butfor a planet that never signed up for the job. Tough right?
Yeah but, although no planetary body has made it to the finish line yet, we can classify some as well on their way there.
Let’s look at a few of them shall we…
Mars — Earth’s ‘Twin‘
No surprise here. Mars has been the top contender for a very long while now. Everyone points to Mars because it’s the most “Earth-like,” but:
- It barely has any CO₂ to release
- It lacks a magnetosphere
- It loses atmosphere constantly still due to the lack of a magnetic field
- It is cold, dry, and has toxic dust
Even NASA agrees we cannot terraform Mars with present or near-future tech. Which is funny because that’s our best contender
But moving on…
Venus
Venus looks Earth-sized until you realize:
- It has 90x Earth’s atmospheric pressure
- It rains acid - like REAL acid.
- Its surface melts metal - heat temperatures could reach as high as 462 degrees Celsius (ie. 867 degrees Fahrenheit) making it the hottest planet in the solar system.
Moons & Mercury
- No air
- Intense radiation
- Few volatiles
- No magnetospheres
- And a lot more NOs
Check out the full list breakdown of other Earth terraform contenders here.
Paraterraforming
Now for the other side.
Paraterraforming is the idea of building sealed, Earth-like habitats without changing the planet itself.
So think; giant domes, shell worlds, underground bases, and asteroid megastructures.
The pro? This is engineering we can actually prototype today.
If terraforming is a thousand-year planetary gamble, paraterraforming is the engineering cheat code humanity can actually run on current hardware.
A. It Uses Physics We Already Understand
Paraterraforming isn’t asking us to:
- Alter a planet’s global climate
- Modify atmospheric composition
- Generate a magnetic field
- Manipulate greenhouse cycles
Instead, it leverages well-understood principles:
- Pressure differentials
- Radiation shielding
- Structural load distribution
- Controlled life-support engineering
B. It Uses Materials We Already Know How to Build
The materials for paraterraforming aren’t hypothetical megastructural alloys from sci-fi novels. They’re real technologies advancing today:
- Regolith-based concrete
- Graphene sheets for radiation protection
- Basalt fiber materials (which can be produced on Mars)
- Water-ice domes that double as shielding
- Inflatable habitats with multi-layer laminate skins
- Lunar lava tubes repurposed as natural bunkers
Paraterraforming uses materials already in the CAD files, whereas Terraforming requires materials on scales we don't even have on Earth.
C. It Operates on Scales We Can Manage
That’s the secret:
It’smodular, incremental, and fail-safe.
You can start with:
- a 20-person habitat
Then attach: - a 200-person dome
Then expand into: - a multi-kilometer enclosed valley
Quite similar to how cities grow on Earth.
D. It Lets Us Control the Ecosystem Instead of Just Hoping a Planet (magically) Plays Along
Terraforming tries to recreate Earth’s delicate ecological ballet across an entire world; from nitrogen cycles to water vapor balance.
So within controlled habitats, we can tune:
- oxygen percentages
- humidity
- CO₂ levels
- microbial ecology
- crop cycles
- waste-to-resource loops
That’s the difference between controlling a terrarium and controlling an entire planet’s atmosphere.
What Paraterraforming Avoids Entirely
Terraforming means battling unpredictable planetary systems:
- atmospheric chemistry (which can surprise you like Venus)
- global climate cycles (which can collapse)
- solar wind & radiation (when a planet lacks a magnetosphere)
- biosphere unpredictability (life systems tend to do whatever they want)
But with Paraterraforming, we simply steps across these problems like they're potholes.
For instance:
➡️ We don’t have to fix Mars’s atmosphere — we just build our own atmosphere inside the damn dome.
➡️ We don’t have to stop solar wind — we just bury habitats under regolith or ice.
➡️ We don’t need oxygenating plant ecosystems — we can manufacture breathable air with renewable energy.
No planetary variables❌ No global dust storms❌ No atmosphere collapse❌
Just engineering, maintenance, and iteration.✅
Project Examples Already in Progress
- NASA’s Mars habitat prototypes
- Lunar cave base blueprints
- ESA’s spherical ice domes (using frozen water as radiation shielding)
- Starship cargo modules converted into surface habitats
- Private orbital station concepts
THE ILLUSION : Where Both Ideas Break
You thought there wasn’t a catch?
Nahh, there’s always a catch (especially when it comes to outer space).
Terraforming
When it comes to terraforming, the illusions attached stack up fast. It goes without saying, but I’ll say them anyways because I’m Mojo.
Illusion 1: “We can do it with today’s science”
Nope , we can’t - even if we still had Einstein with us. We lack the energy, technology, materials, and the raw talents honestly.
We may probably achieve terraforming, but that’ll be with the science of the next few centuries, not right now.
Illusion 2: “Mars has enough CO₂ to thicken its atmosphere”
Not really - it doesn’t seem plausible from where we stand. And there are multiple studies that think so too.
To properly process the plausibility is Mars atmospheric restoration, we must first look closely at the cause. For over billions of years, solar wind buffeted the Red Planet, stripping away the Martian atmosphere and causing water to preemptively evaporate.
That’s the theory behind it. And perhaps, if that theory is actually true, then trying to thicken Mars’ atmosphere artificially will be like injecting a virus and the cure into a human body - because last I checked, there are still heavy sandstorms on the planet.
Illusion 3: “Venus can be cooled”
Yeah right… and Pacific ocean can be drained.
Cooling Venus will require nothing short of a ‘science-fiction’ scale engineering model - which might be made available (in a lot of centuries).
Illusion 4: “It will take “hundreds” of years”
coughs… “understatement”.
Terraforming is, at the least, a multi-millennial project. Reason for this? Planet terraforming is not as easy as playing Dress up Barbie.
Illusion 5: “It’s ethical”
What if alien microbes and lifeforms exist? Terraforming Mars would be equivalent to instantly getting rid of them. We may likely be destroying the only alien life we’ve ever found. And for what? Real estate?
It’s kind of like those movies about alien domination on Earth. But this time, we’re the antagonists.
Paraterraforming
As good as we’ve painted paraterraforming, it has its misconceptions too:
Illusion 1: “After establishment, we’re good”
Well, not technically. Just like your house, your car, and any other liability you have in your life (your child included); floating, orbiting, self-preserving domes will require constant maintenance and a lot of constant cost influx.
You think your taxes are bad now? Just wait.
Illusion 2: “The risks are minimal because were protected”
Gas leaks, asteroid collisions, space debris, cosmic rays penetration, viral/contamination wild spread…. A single habitat failure can be more than catastrophic. We’re talking ‘instant mass genocide of billions’.
Surely I believe that by then, there will be contingency plans in place for event/occurrences like this, but that doesn’t really stop one from considering the various (severe) risks involved.
Illusion 3: “We can paraterraform anywhere in the solar system”
We really can’t.
But in essence, the argument quickly becomes if we even should in the first place. I mean, we are already in a self-preserving dome, so what’s the point of putting that dome into a hazardous non-conducive zone or environment. Yes, we are protected in a floating Airbnb, but still, some environments (like Europa or Venus) pose intense contamination risks.
I feel like human’s thirst for exploration will get the better of us once more.
But what do I know?…
The misconceptions/illusions attached to paraterraforming slightly matches that of teraforming. But the difference with is, none of these are technically planetary impossibilities. They are actually solvable engineering problems (and more timely too).
THE DIFFERENCE: Terraformation VS. Paraterraforming (broken down)
|
Factor |
Terraformation |
Paraterraforming |
|---|---|---|
|
Feasibility |
Low (speculative) |
High (close-term) |
|
Timescale |
Centuries–millennia |
Years–decades |
|
Cost |
Astronomical |
Modular & scalable |
|
Ethics |
Risky |
Responsible |
|
Tech readiness |
Conceptual |
Prototyping now |
|
Control |
Planet-wide |
Local & contained |
THE FUTURE : A Hybrid Reality
The future may likely be a combination of both ideas:
Start with domes and underground habitats ➡️ Expand them into shell worlds ➡️ Modify local climates inside megastructures ➡️ Experiment with partial atmospheric engineering and magnetosphere resurrection ➡️ Consider small-scale terraforming long after we’re well-established.
A perfect example flowchart of what may happen (if everyone reads this post that is).
I take my leave…
Terraforming is the mythic dream — the idea that we can turn ‘dead' worlds into vibrant blue planets.
Paraterraforming is the scientific path — build what we need, where we need it, with the technologies we actually have.
One is a fantasy of power. The other is a blueprint for survival.
Together, they create a roadmap for humanity’s future among the stars.
The debate of whether or not we should terraform other planetary bodies still remains a debate. People at the negative end of the argument scream of galactic ethics and risks, while those at the affirmative end scream of survival and a dream. But both parties have the least clue of how it’s going to get done.
So I guess they’ll just keep arguing for a while.
A Sub-Reddit Question I came across…
Should we reshape other worlds?
Or should we reshape ourselves?
In other words, the information portrayed here is…
Instead of adapting new worlds to humanity, let humanity adapt to new worlds.
From my perspective, this is even more farfetched and science-fiction than Terraforming itself - No backings, no facts, just a galactic thought.
But what do you think? 🤔