A Report on Modern Technology, Part 2
For all the ecological toll Earth has taken, mankind has come out with many problems solved - among them, the energy crisis so prominent around the transition from the 20th to the 21st century. No longer able to use fossil fuels, power is now generated from a variety sources - hydropower along major rivers; solar and wind in nations with vast stretches of flat terrain; geothermal in geologically active regions; even some fusion, predominant in regions where alternatives fail and in the few off-world sites where solar has proved insufficient or impractical.
Perhaps the most impressive of all of mankind's achievements, however, is the development of faster-than-light travel, via the Alcubierre drive* and the Casimir effect. An incredibly expensive technology, the Alcubierre drive can only travel over a span of a certain pre-programmed distance, and even then, has been deemed largely impractical for intrasystem travel. Still, a handful of probes have been sent to known locations, though no manned mission has been sent out before now.
*This is not how the Alcubierre drive would work in real life, if it could work at all. The Casimir effect is also rather questionable in its ability to work as depicted.
Exoplanet research has advanced, but the shift of focus back to colonization of the Solar System has slowed its progress. With the advancement of developments within the system - permanently inhabited satellites, colonies on Mars, Phobos, and Deimos; research bases on the Moon and many asteroids; the discovery of unicellular fossils on Mars and the subsequent banning of all planned manned missions and many unmanned ones to Enceladus, Europa, and Titan - space technology has largely been devoted to more fully exploring our immediate surroundings. Despite this, progress has been made towards detecting more extrasolar objects, including atmospheric analysis of gas giants, and, on rare occasions, super-Earths - and, by a stroke of pure luck, one small Oxygen/Nitrogen-atmosphere world, far away...
You may now submit proposals for
social and ideological movements, as well as
the type of organization that is establishing the expedition, and why. Try to keep these in-line with the storyline so far - we already know that people are very opposed to biotech, for example, so it's unlikely there are any large movements with elements of transhumanism attached to them. Similarly, keep in mind that we've got a lot of options for mission founders and reasoning - multinational research projects, national shows of their achievements, perhaps a private corporation establishing a stepping stone to even more distant worlds?