Going live in 30 minutes - Join us!!
Join us to meet our winners, your community collaborators - and our amazing sponsors at the Convergent Aeronautics Solutions Project!
Register here: https://bit.ly/3i6DmFt
Help us build a better understanding of the future of aviation - mapping its relationship with societal, economic, technological, environmental, political, and regulatory trends.
We welcome diverse perspectives - aviation and non-aviation - to participate in this important effort. The future of aviation is best envisioned through the combined perspectives from diverse fields – including but not limited to some of the following fields: government, academia, art & film, economics, engineering, gaming, innovation, mathematics, municipalities, policy, strategy & vision, subject matter experts involved in emerging trends, technology, tourism and more.
This challenge seeks to catalyze a set of perspectives, forecasts, timelines, and storylines that contribute to a better understanding of the future of aviation.
The Problem
Make a difference today by helping us think ahead – the future of aviation is everyone’s reward!
The “Future-Scaping Our Skies” Challenge aims to understand how societal, technological, environmental, economic, regulatory, and political changes over the next 30 years could impact aviation and vice versa.
In a world increasingly defined by change and connectivity, we seek a better way to anticipate what the future may hold to support better decisions today. We’re inviting all innovators, futurists, and pragmatists to help us build a better understanding of possible future state scenarios and needs associated with these scenarios.
To register for the challenge, click the “BEGIN ENTRY” button above. The Challenge Forum is your space to share thoughts and ideas with the challenge community or to create teams.
Motivation
The Challenge Breakthrough
What You Can Do to Cause a Breakthrough
Help us build a better understanding of the future so we may take better action today. Share your predictions for the ways that key trends in technology, our society and business may impact long term needs for aviation.
NASA is seeking to collect a range of diverse responses to analyze the following items through the lens of a 30-year horizon:
Grand prize - $7,500
Second - $5,000
Third - $2,500
Fourth - $2,500
Fifth - $1,000
Sixth - $1,000
Seventh - $500
Eighth - $500
Ninth - $500
Open to submissions - Friday, April 2, 2021
Submission deadline - Tuesday, June 1, 2021
Judging - June & July 2021
Confirmation of winners - Wednesday, July 28, 2021
To be eligible for an award, your submission must, at minimum:
Submissions must, at a minimum:
In this challenge, we’re requesting your help with a forecasting effort - to build timelines and storylines that outline key trends and events that you believe might unfold over the next 30 years.
Specifically, we’re looking forward to your scenario plans for potential future states. Your estimates for timelines, key event horizons, dependencies and likely obstacles and enablers that could lead to each of these potential future states. Wherever possible and appropriate – we welcome the inclusion of data sources, references, and multi-media illustration of your timeline concepts.
To participate and prepare your submission, please create a 30-year timeline and story line that depicts the key defining trends, events, and factors that will lead to this future state scenario, and provide any details bring your submission to life. Through your timeline and story line, describe what journey and end state of this scenario look like to you - and what environmental, technical, political, technologies, societal, regulatory, and economic factors or trends will lead to this future state scenario.
For those who prefer to select from a pre-established list of potential future state scenarios – we have developed the below based on scholarly research and extensive interviews with economists, technologists, academics, innovators, futurists and more. Each of these potential future state scenarios suggest high level description of what the world might look like in 30 years.
***
Scenario 1 | Create Your Own Future State Scenario: You may have a very distinct vision for what society and aviation might look like in 30 years. Please apply the scenario building framework provided in the guidance above and share your forecast regarding how that future state might unfold.
Scenario 2 | Safety: In 30 years, the cost of ensuring safety, traceability, and compliance (Certification -regulatory qualification for use) of new products and services in aviation is significantly reduced.
Scenario 3 | Innovation: In 30 years, resilience and elasticity in aviation allows society, producers, and innovators to enjoy the benefits of aviation without significant disruption. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: What is society like? What is there more of, and what is there less of that contributes to this result?
Scenario 4 | Data: In 30 years, data usage enables a broad array of new products, services, and experiences for aviation while addressing privacy and usage intent considerations. How do we view data? What are the stakeholders involved in data ownership definitions, governance, usage, standards, and valuation?
Scenario 5 | Intellectual Property: In 30 years, intellectual property (“IP”) usage enables a broad array of new products, services, and experiences for aviation while addressing ownership and usage intent considerations. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: How do we view IP? What are the stakeholders involved in IP ownership definitions, governance, usage, standards, and valuation?
Scenario 6 | Speed: In 30 years, the speed of aviation is not just about how fast the airplane flies. Aviation is experiencing minimal inefficiencies. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: What is society like? What would you expect to see less of and what would you expect to see more of?
Scenario 7 | Orchestration: Old business models, partnerships and ways of work have been radically disrupted by platform-enabled collaborations and interdisciplinary innovation. This has enabled entirely new ecosystems, operational concepts, and intellectual property structures. Ideas are created within an orchestrated symphony of technologists, thought leaders, companies, and organizations from both aviation and non-aviation sectors in research and goal setting. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: What does this outcome look like in 30 years? What evolution of regulations, workflows, key factors, behaviors, and interdependencies are most likely to drive this outcome?
Scenario 8 | Trust: Aviation deployment of new technologies and practices now hinges on societal trust, privacy, and perceptions of equity. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: In 30 years, does trust of advances in technology and science support or detract from the certification, implementation, and adoption of new technologies?
Scenario 9 | Technology: In this scenario 30 years out, we propel ourselves in a radically different way. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: As a technologist - what technologies or science developments are you aware of that you believe will advance over the next 30 years and will affect the way transportation is actuated. For your submission, describe what this technology or science is, how it unfolds in the next 30 years and how it is used.
Scenario 10 | Autonomy: In 30 years, aviation is fully autonomous – including passenger and cargo flights, long and short trip, and ground operations. Additional points to consider if you choose to map this scenario: What technologies or societal developments are you aware of that you believe will advance over the next 30 years and will affect the way autonomous transportation is actuated and adopted. For your submission, describe what this technology, how it unfolds, and how passenger trust evolves in the next 30 years to make this scenario possible and likely.
Scenario 11 | Sustainability: In 30 years, the aviation has achieved net-zero emissions from both operations and supply chain, balancing sector goals between environment, operations, and economics. Planned reuse of all components is designed into the product lifecycle.
Scenario 12 | Simplicity: In 30 years, society’s needs are served by different aviation capabilities and modalities. This future state has achieved a highly automated, technology-enabled, efficient infrastructure - and yet maintains a high degree of personalized experience for travelers and customizable delivery options for regional operators.
Scenario 13 | Accessibility: In 30 years, society’s needs are highly diversified and distributed. Urban areas are less concentrated, the evolving nature of work and automation has driven a need for skills evolution and a shift in workforce populations, and the proliferation of technology and digitally enabled opportunities have aligned with the availability of connectivity.
Submissions will be evaluated by a panel of at least four (4) judges comprised of NASA employees with expertise in the fields of Aeronautics / Aviation, and three (3) Shoshin Works representatives with expertise in the fields of Strategic Planning and Aviation / Space. Submissions will be evaluated based on compliance with Entry Guidelines and Requirements, as specified herein, as well as, but not limited to, the following criteria (collectively the “Judging Criteria”). Judging will occur during June and July 2021. Up to nine (9) of the submissions that best meet the Judging Criteria may be selected as winners.
Criterion | Description | Overall Weight |
Clarity | Ability to explain the scenario storyline and timeline in a clear and concise manner. | 25% |
Substantiation of the scenario prediction storyline and timeline. | Ability to support scenario prediction storyline and timeline with data, references, or citations. If the ideas are entirely novel, provide a clear and compelling argument for the ideas. | 50% |
Visual synthesis | Ability to enhance clarity or cohesion of the scenario predictive storyline and timeline by synthesizing critical timelines, events, or supporting data in embedded or multi-media visual elements. | 25% |
Participation Eligibility:
Submissions are open only to U.S. persons and organizations.
The Prize is open to anyone age 18 or older participating as an individual or as a team.
Individual competitors and teams may originate from the United States, as long as United States federal sanctions do not prohibit participation (see: https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/sanctions/Programs/Pages/Programs.aspx).
If you are a NASA employee, a Government contractor, or employed by a Government Contractor, your participation in this challenge may be restricted.
To be eligible to compete, you must comply with all the terms of the challenge as defined in the Challenge-Specific Agreement.
Intellectual Property
Participants who are awarded a prize for their submission retain ownership of all Intellectual Property demonstrated by the winning/awarded submissions. See the Challenge-Specific Agreement for complete details.
Registration and Submissions:
Submissions must be made online (only), via upload to the HeroX.com website, on or before June 1, 2021, at 5:00 pm ET. No late submissions will be accepted.
Selection of Winners:
Based on the winning criteria, prizes will be awarded per the weighted Judging Criteria section above.
Judging Panel:
The determination of the winners will be made by Shoshin Works based on the evaluation by relevant NASA and Shoshin Works specialists.
Additional Information