And he also wants to see more cooperation between the US and other countries - including China - when it comes to space exploration

They would live out the rest of their days on Mars until their death

He wants the first people on Mars to stay there and create a colony

And he also followed up on comments made the other day that the first manned missions to Mars should be one-way trips

The second man on the moon has revealed his thoughts on climate change, one-way missions to Mars and the state of space exploration.

He says he is ‘sceptical about the claims that human produced carbon dioxide is the direct contributor to global warming.’

And following up on comments made the earlier in the week, he says the first Martian explorers should be sent there for the rest of their days - so that they might be the first colonists in a permanent settlement.

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Buzz Aldrin (pictured) reveals his views on climate change, Mars and space exploration. The second man on the moon was speaking exclusively to MailOnline from LA. He is pictured here speaking on the campus of Massachusetts Institute of Technology on Wednesday

In recent years Dr Aldrin, who holds a doctorate of science in Astronautics from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, has been outspoken on a wide range of issues.

He has been a huge proponent of sending humans to Mars to colonise the red planet, outlined by his book ‘My Vision for Space Exploration’ released last year.

And he told MailOnline it should not necessarily be just to further our exploration efforts, but also to ensure the survival of the human race.

BUZZ ALDRIN'S BIOGRAPHY Edwin ‘Buzz’ Eugene Aldrin, Jr was born on 20 January 1930 in Glen Ridge, New Jersey. He has a bachelor of science degree from the US Military Academy at West Point, New York and a doctorate of science from the Massachusetts Insitute of Technology for a thesis titled ‘Guidance for Manned Orbital Rendezvous’. Dr Aldrin is one of very few early astronauts to have a background in science. This earned him the nickname ‘Dr Rendezvous’ during the Apollo programme. The nickname ‘Buzz’ comes from his youngest sister repeatedly calling him ‘buzzer’ instead of ‘brother’. In 1988, he legally changed his name to Buzz. On 11 November 1966 he set a record for the longest spacewalk at the time, five and a half hours, during the Gemini 12 mission. He solved many of the problems that had plagued previous spacewalks, notably using handrails and footrests to prevent over-exertion. On 20 July 1969, he became the second man to walk on the moon after Neil Armstrong. The first words from the lunar surface were actually spoken by Dr Aldrin when their spacecraft touched down, when he said: ‘Contact light’. He resigned from Nasa in July 1971 and later the Air Force. Since then he has remained an advocate of space exploration, penning papers and books including ‘Return to Earth’ and the recent ‘Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration’. Advertisement

This inevitably leads to questions about our own planet - for example, are humans causing global warming that will render our world uninhabitable?

‘In the news today I hear about the large solar flares, which is an indication of the power of the sun to influence Earth and our climate,’ Dr Aldrin said.

‘My first inclination is to be a bit sceptical about the claims that human-produced carbon dioxide is the direct contributor to global warming.

‘And if there is that doubt, then I think an unbiased non-politically motivated group of people worldwide, representing us instead of creating taxes like the carbon tax, should examine the output of different nations that might contribute to the very large cycles of warming and cooling that have taken place long before we started to have humans producing emissions.

‘In a short period of time it appears to some people [that humans are] the cause of global warming - which is now called climate change - [but] climate change has certainly existed over time.’

It's a position that will no doubt strike a chord with Nasa, who have been performing extensive climate missions in recent years to find out the impact humans are having on the climate.

‘You can tell I’m not too bashful about some of my feelings,’ he says,’But I try and limit them to areas that I feel my development of innovations and thinking can be brought to bear on challenges that are facing civilisation here on Earth.’

He also bemoans some of the excessive funding that is allocated to climate change research, saying: ‘Space is not as enthusiastically supported by the world and by the American people anywhere near as much as it was during the pioneering years of the 60s and 70s.

‘The society of life on Mars, or the challenge of making Mars more liveable, will have significant benefits on our attempts to modify and change in some ways the environment here on Earth.

Dr Aldrin says he is 'a bit sceptical about the claims that human-produced carbon dioxide is the direct contributor to global warming.' He believes that Earth's climate (stock image shown) is perhaps more influenced by the sun than it is by humans

And it's not just the attitude towards climate that Dr Aldrin disagrees with when it comes to Nasa - he also doesn't make much of their roadmap to to Mars.

Nasa’s plan to get to Mars currently involves sending humans to an asteroid in the 2020s before putting boots on the red planet in the 2030s.

But this is a route that Dr Aldrin vehemently opposes.

‘I rather strongly object to the asteroid retrieval mission,’ he says. This is because he wants Nasa to take a more direct route to Mars, getting people their sooner rather than later.

Rather than wasting time with an asteroid mission, he wants to see a mission to Mars in the works as soon as possible, perhaps with a return to the moon first to test some of the technologies needed.

He says the first humans on Mars should be the first inhabitants of a long-term colony that will create a permanent settlement there.

Beginning with six people on the surface, he wants to see six more added repeatedly on further missions.

‘It sounds complicated but it’s the result of my working with Purdue University to develop transportation systems that cycle from Earth to Mars and back to Earth again,’ he says.

‘I do believe that until we attain a sufficient number of people on the surface, and I don’t know what that number is - 60, 80 or 100 - the first people to land on the surface of Mars are indeed the most difficult people to bring back to Earth.

‘We haven’t established the procedures of fuel, the vehicles on Mars to bring them back.

‘To do so is more expensive, and it delays the landing of more people.

‘Keeping people on Mars is cheaper than if they come back.’

And it’s for this reason Dr Aldrin thinks they should be kept on Mars.

With regards to Mars, Dr Aldrin says the first explorers to land there should remain permanently (stock image of Mars One colony shown). He says they can arrive in groups of six and eventually build a settlement on the red planet that up to 100 people could inhabit

‘I do believe that until we attain a sufficient number of people on the surface, and I don’t know what that number is - 60, 80 or 100 - the first people to land on the surface of Mars [stock image shown] are indeed the most difficult people to bring back to Earth,' says Dr Aldrin

‘These people have been trained and given the great historical value of being the first human beings in history to occupy another planet and people want to bring them back?' he continues.

‘Let me ask those people who want to bring them back, what are you going to do with them back here on Earth that will in any way [justify] the billions and billions of dollars that have been invested in those human beings to put them on Mars?

‘If they come back we’re leaving Mars empty.

‘I say to you, from Mars they can do more to inspire people about space travel by transmitting images, messages and video from the surface of Mars.

‘And they can help settle the next and the next and the next numbers of people that get there.

‘I want people to think very carefully; what can we possibly do with those people back on Earth?

‘Do we have a parade for them?

‘They can do more of value from the surface of Mars than they can by bringing them back to Earth.’

On 20 July 1969, Dr Aldrin became the second man to walk on the moon after Neil Armstrong (both shown in this image). The first words from the lunar surface were actually spoken by Dr Aldrin when their spacecraft touched down, when he said: ‘Contact light’

But with this proposal comes an obvious question, namely does that mean Dr Aldrin thinks the first people sent to Mars should remain there for the rest of their lives?

‘Yes, that’s the short answer,’ he says.

One interesting aspect of people living on Mars that Dr Aldrin brings up is how people might have a shorter life expectancy. Perhaps their stay there, although for the rest of their lives, might not be as long as on Earth.

‘The life expectancy of people going to Mars may be decreased by the higher level of radiation that they receive,’ he explains.

Their lives would likely be shortened by about 10 or 20 years, but Dr Aldrin says any potential Mars explorer would be more than willing to live a shorter life if it meant starting the first Mars colony.

But he adds: ‘You ask anyone who’s been to the moon if you would rather have stayed back here than having pioneered the first humans to reach our very nearby object in space.'

Pictured left to right are Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins - the crew of Apollo 11 - on 5 July 1969 just prior to their mission to the moon. He says that none of the lunar explorers would have chosen to stay on Earth rather than become the first men to visit the moon

To make such a mission possible, Dr Aldrin calls for more international cooperation with regards to space exploration.

He alludes to the culmination of the Apollo missions, themselves somewhat of a show of strength from the US to Russia, as the dawn of the age of cooperation.

‘If you want my honest opinion, the demonstration of the industrial might behind the Apollo programme demonstrated to the Soviets that they could not match the development of missiles with nuclear warheads [in the US].

‘That brought about a re-evaluation by President Gorbachev of just what the Soviet Union should be doing, and I believe that had a major effect on the outcome of the Cold War.

‘We have new threats today, and I believe the English speaking nations of the world will be prominent in resisting those threats to the freedom and liberty that was extended around the world by the British Empire.'

To make a mission to Mars possible, Dr Aldrin calls for more international cooperation (ISS shown) with regards to space exploration. He alludes to the culmination of the Apollo missions, themselves somewhat of a show of strength from the US to Russia, as the dawn of the age of cooperation

He continues: ‘In 1975 when the Cold War was still quite contested, with missiles pointed at each other, the US and Soviet Union conducted a joint mission in space called Apollo-Soyuz,’ he continues.

‘Next July is the 40th anniversary of that, and I believe that we should take advantage of that event in history and make an announcement or make a strong effort towards bringing the Chinese space programme to the ISS.

‘America’s return to leadership [in space] should be by not competing with other nations that want to land their people on the moon; we can help them considerably as we develop the transportation systems required to get large numbers of human beings to the surface of Mars permanently.'

However Dr Aldrin says he is ‘disappointed’ at the progress made in space exploration since he set foot on the moon.

But he has remained a huge advocate of space exploration, penning papers and books including ‘Return to Earth’ and the recent ‘Mission to Mars: My Vision for Space Exploration’been a huge proponent of space exploration

Dr Aldrin now runs a charity for veterans of previous conflicts and war-like activities to help them deal with post-traumatic stress disorder.

He admits he has been ‘a little lonesome’ at times but has enjoyed working with a team internationally on various matters dealing with space and science.