
Michael D. Griffin
Co-Founder and Co-President, LogiQ; former Administrator of NASA
Michael D. Griffin is the Co-Founder and Co-President of LogiQ, Inc., a company providing highend
management, scientific, and technical consulting services. He was previously the Under
Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, and in that role shared responsibility with
the Deputy Under Secretary for research, development, and prototyping activities within the
Department of Defense. In prior roles he was the Chairman and CEO of Schafer Corporation,
the King-MacDonald Professor at University of Alabama in Huntsville, the Administrator of
NASA, Space Department Head at the John Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory,
President of In-Q-Tel, CEO of Magellan Systems, and EVP and General Manager of Orbital ATK’s
Space Systems Group. He is a member of the National Academy of Engineering and the
International Academy of Astronautics, an Honorary Fellow of the American Institute of
Aeronautics and Astronautics, a Fellow of the American Astronautical Society, and a Fellow of
the Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers. He has received the NASA Exceptional
Achievement Medal, the AIAA Space Systems Medal and Goddard Astronautics Award, the
National Space Club’s Goddard Trophy, the Rotary National Award for Space Achievement, the
Missile Defense Agency’s Ronald Reagan Award, and has twice been awarded the Department
of Defense Distinguished Public Service Medal. He holds seven earned degrees and has been
recognized with honorary doctoral degrees from Florida Southern College and the University of
Notre Dame. He is a Certified Flight Instructor with instrument and multiengine ratings, a
Registered Professional Engineer in Maryland and California, and the lead author of two dozen
technical papers and the textbook Space Vehicle Design.
Programm
- - Uhr
Forward to the Moon – The Next Economic and Strategic Frontier (in English)
What sounds like science fiction today could soon become economic reality. Once humans return to the Moon, building an independent lunar infrastructure will open the door to entirely new value chains - from mechanical engineering and robotics to advanced materials and energy systems. Many of the skills required for this future are long-standing strengths of German industry.
Will the Moon become the next industrial hub - and Germany a pioneer of the extraterrestrial economy? What decisions must be made now to unlock this potential, and how can technological leadership be turned into a lasting strategic advantage?
Michael D. Griffin, Co-Founder & Co-President of LogiQ, former Administrator of NASA
Johannes Hunfeld, Associate Director External Technology, Linde
Sabine von der Recke, Mitglied des Vorstands, OHB