

Frontier Sustainment Group explores the operational ecosystems required to support long-duration human habitation across constrained, remote, and frontier environments.
A systems framework exploring operational continuity, infrastructure, logistics, resilience, maintainability, and human-centered sustainment across frontier and constrained environments.
Artificial intelligence will become one of the defining technologies of human exploration and long-duration sustainment. Future habitats on the Moon, Mars, and other remote environments will rely on intelligent systems to monitor life support, manage resources, predict equipment failures, coordinate logistics, optimize food production, and assist human decision-making in places where reliability is essential and resources are limited.
At Frontier Sustainment Group, we believe AI is not a replacement for human ingenuity—it is a force multiplier. The future of human sustainment will be built through the integration of advanced technology, engineering, operational experience, systems thinking, and human judgment. AI will enhance our ability to solve complex problems, but resilient frontier systems will always require thoughtful design, interdisciplinary collaboration, and responsible leadership.
Our mission is to help shape that future by exploring the systems, strategies, and technologies that will enable people to live, work, and thrive beyond Earth. Artificial intelligence will be one of those technologies—but success will come from how intelligently we integrate it into complete human sustainment systems.
The future won't be built by artificial intelligence alone. It will be built by people who know how to harness it.
Exploration may initiate the frontier, but continuity determines whether civilization survives. Long-duration human presence depends on infrastructure, logistics, resilience, maintainability, and operational ecosystems capable of enduring under pressure over time.
Remote operations, infrastructure systems, logistics networks, construction ecosystems, and resource-constrained environments already reveal how sustainment systems succeed, degrade, and adapt under operational stress.
Exploring fatigue, psychology, workflow stability, and operational continuity in long-duration sustainment systems.
Why future frontier systems may depend more on continuity and repairability than technological novelty alone.
How resource flow, packaging systems, redundancy, and logistics shape operational resilience.
Understanding degradation, maintenance, environmental pressure, and long-duration infrastructure continuity.
Frontier Sustainment Group explores operational systems for long-duration human habitation and frontier sustainment environments.
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A Strategic Advisory Division of The Consultancy, LLC
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