But that hasn't stopped Redouane Fakir as he develops a proposal to build the first-ever rocket launch site on Canada's west coast.
His dream is to eventually make Vancouver Island Canada's future hub for space science and exploration - once he lines up the cash, local co-operation, and government approval.
The astrophysicist already has his eye on a site, even at this early stage: Estevan Point, an isolated peninsula halfway down the west coast of the island.
Fakir says he wants to build a "parking-lot-sized" launch pad that would send Canadian space probes into a polar orbit.
"If you want to optimize the safety of when we launch into this polar orbit that will get you on top of the Arctic, you can launch over the Pacific Ocean in a south-southwest direction," he told The Canadian Press.
Fakir says the platform, which could also be used to send up scientific balloons, would not be busy all the time.
Fakir wants to make it clear - especially to environmentalists - that he doesn't intend to build a huge complex like the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
"In the beginning, we'll be lucky if we have one launch a year and then maybe two or three a year," said the director of Space Launch Canada. He is also an honourary professor of theoretical physics at the University of British Columbia.
He believes a half-dozen towns, including Port Alberni, Campbell River and Comox, could each house one aspect of the program.
"For example, Campbell River has ambitions to develop higher education and a research program could be developed in collaboration with the university up there," Fakir said.
Vic Goodman, the CEO of Rivercorp, the Campbell River Economic Development Corporation, says he's been invited to meet with Fakir but the project hasn't gotten very far yet.
"It's too early for us to comment on the pros and cons of his concept," he said. "We're willing to keep an open mind about the idea."
Fakir argues that there are advantages to Canada having its own launch facility, instead of relying on the rockets of other countries like India and Russia.
The current international tug-of-war over Arctic sovereignty is a good case in point.
"If you want to be serious about your sovereignty over the North you have to have space autonomy like the other players, and to do that the minimum is to launch devices from your own territory," Fakir said.
Ian McDade, a York University space scientist, believes launch delays - and the cost of sending up satellites - could be reduced if Canada had its own facility.
He points to one of his own experiments, which involved an instrument that measures wind in the stratosphere.
"We won a competition with the Japanese to go for a free launch on one of their satellites," he recalled.
"We were all ready to go, probably spent $8 million just doing the paperwork, then they had their own problems and a couple of failures (and) we got bumped off."
McDade says the European Space Agency and the Russians tried putting the instrument on a satellite, but after two years of engineering discovered that it wasn't compatible.
"If we had our own launch capability, you would shortcut all that," he said. "It would make it better and cheaper in the end."
A more recent example is NEOSSat, a Canadian satellite which was originally supposed to be launched in March to look for potentially dangerous asteroids.
A Canadian Space Agency official says the launch of the $15 million suitcase-sized satellite has now been delayed until the first quarter of 2012.
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