Valley of Depth

Railroad to Mars, with Halen Mattison (CEO of General Galactic)

Dec 4, 2025
Halen Mattison, Co-founder and CEO of General Galactic, left SpaceX to pursue a vision for advanced space propellant infrastructure. He discusses his innovative water electrolysis propulsion system, Genesis, which aims to deliver high efficiency using abundant resources. Halen highlights the industry's reluctance to adopt new technology, the importance of specific impulse for mission economics, and the potential of mobility services to support long-term lunar and Martian infrastructures. He envisions a future with refueling depots stretching from low Earth orbit to Mars.
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ANECDOTE

Leaving SpaceX To Chase Long-Term Vision

  • Halen decided to leave SpaceX after a conversation where Elon called his vision "long-term."
  • He realized to build off-world propellant infrastructure soon, he had to start his own company.
INSIGHT

Specific Impulse Drives Mission Economics

  • General Galactic argues the industry has given up on specific impulse and settled for lower performance.
  • That shrink in ISP makes missions more expensive per kilogram and undermines mobility's economic promise.
INSIGHT

Genesis: Water To High-Performance Propellant

  • Genesis uses water electrolysis to produce hydrogen and oxygen for both chemical and electric modes.
  • That creates hydrazine-like thrust and xenon-like efficiency using cheap, abundant water.
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