How Japan Plans to Build the Impossible 96,000 km Space Elevator

Japan is planning to build a 96,000 km cable from Earth to space. And it isn't science fiction — it's a construction project with a company, a material, and a 2050 deadline. Obayashi Corporation built Tokyo Skytree — Japan's tallest structure at 634 metres. Now they're working on something that makes a skyscraper look like a garden fence. Their space elevator plan involves a carbon nanotube cable stretching from a floating platform in the equatorial Pacific all the way to geostationary orbit at 36,000 km — and then out to a counterweight at 96,000 km. The whole thing held taut by gravity and centrifugal force. What's in this video: Why single-use rockets are about to become obsolete The engineering behind the 400-metre floating Earth Port Why Carbon Nanotubes are the only material that can survive the tension How the initial "seed cable" is dropped from orbit and caught at sea How 510 robotic climbers will thicken the cable over 18 years The assembly of a permanent geostationary station 36,000 km in the sky #SpaceElevator #Megaprojects #HowItsMade #Japan #FactoryTour #Engineering #SpaceExploration #Construction #InsideTheFactory #JapanEngineering #CarbonNanotube #FullProcess #Aviation #Trending ⚠️ IMPORTANT: ABOUT THIS VIDEO ------------------------------------------------------------------- This is an educational documentary analyzing the engineering and construction of public infrastructure, based entirely on open-source information. All visuals and animations are 100% synthetic, AI-generated conceptual representations. No real footage of the construction sites or personnel was used. This video is purely informational and intended for educational purposes only. Music Credits: Music: Monolith by Soundridemusic Link to Video:    • No Copyright Epic Teaser Trailer Backgroun...   Music from #InAudio: https://inaudio.org/ Track Name. Life Goes Mercury