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Climate change, so what? The space tourism business

2022-01-04T05:18:56.188Z


Climate change, so what? The space tourism business Created: 01/04/2022, 06:10 AM It is a holiday for those who are particularly adventurous with a heavy budget: all-tourism. © Pavel Kassin / Roscosmos Space Agency / AP / dpa Millions in the account and no idea where to put them? For adventure seekers with a heavy budget, providers for excursions into space are targeting. Space nations are invo


Climate change, so what?

The space tourism business

Created: 01/04/2022, 06:10 AM

It is a holiday for those who are particularly adventurous with a heavy budget: all-tourism.

© Pavel Kassin / Roscosmos Space Agency / AP / dpa

Millions in the account and no idea where to put them?

For adventure seekers with a heavy budget, providers for excursions into space are targeting.

Space nations are involved as well as private companies.

Moscow / New York - Anyone who has always wanted to go down in history as a holidaymaker would probably have the opportunity to do so in the next year or two.

You can book a flight to the International Space Station (ISS) including a walk in space.

“No private person has ever done this before,” says Tom Shelley.

As head of the US company Space Adventures, which specializes in space tourism, he sells the trip together with Russia.

The excursion is only for the very rich.

"The price is very high, so there aren't very many who can afford it," admits Shelley in an interview with the German Press Agency in Moscow.

According to his information, a flight to the ISS with the Russian space agency Roskosmos costs the equivalent of up to 50 million euros.

The spacewalk tour planned for 2023 or 2024 is likely to become even more expensive.

Billionaires in space

Space tourism attracted a lot of attention in 2021 - also because of the race between two billionaires.

In the summer, the British billionaire Richard Branson and shortly afterwards Amazon founder Jeff Bezos tested their missiles.

In the months that followed, Bezos sent two more flights into space with a total of ten passengers - including the actor William Shatner, known as Captain Kirk from "Starship Enterprise".

Bezos has announced further short trips into space for 2022, the demand for tickets is very high.

Branson also wants to offer flights.

With Elon Musk, another billionaire with his own space company sent tourists into space in 2021.

Its four passengers - none of them trained astronauts - spent several days in space and circled the earth several times on board a "Crew Dragon".

In 2022, the company Axiom Space wants to bring tourists to the ISS in the first such cooperation with the US space agency Nasa.

Roscosmos just flew Japanese billionaire Yusaku Maezawa and his assistant Yozo Hirano to the ISS.

Not yet suitable for the masses

Space tourism has picked up significantly, but there can be no talk of a boom - not only are the prices far too high for that, but also the spaceships and the ISS are simply too small.

Since 2001, just nine private individuals have made it to the ISS.

After the US space agency Nasa suspended its manned flights to the ISS, only Russian Soyuz rockets flew from 2011 to 2020.

For a year and a half, private spaceships have been on the move on behalf of NASA - this can boost tourism again.

Russia, on the other hand, has rebuilt its spaceships in such a way that they can only be controlled by a trained cosmonaut. This means that there is now room for two tourists in the Soyuz. In the autumn, Russia also tested an extra-short training program for tourists. Nevertheless, the travelers have to bring a lot of time: You have to estimate three to four months for training and flight, says Shelley. "Many have obligations in life, so it is difficult to find a free time."

The other thing is health.

"We have worked over the years to lower the requirements for private individuals," says the head of Space Adventures.

“You don't have to be perfect.

It's okay to have a few minor health issues.

As long as we know the risks, we can manage them. ”So far, there is hardly any empirical data on how, for example, the body of older people copes with weightlessness - such data could be interesting for flights to Mars, for example.

Devastating climate footprint

From many sides there is sharp criticism of space tourism, for example from environmentalists, politicians and celebrities: It is a business of the rich and for the rich, which is largely carried out without scientific research interests serving the well-being of mankind and without consideration for the climate it.

The rocket launches require vast amounts of fuel, the material and logistics requirements are immense, and the per capita climate balance for all tourists is correspondingly devastating.

more on the subject

"Medical problem": start from Maurer to the ISS postponed again

Start of German astronauts to the ISS postponed again

German astronaut Maurer: "Next updates from orbit"

Astronauts and cosmonauts from national space agencies came up against criticism because space tourists like to refer to themselves as astronauts, even if they only spent a few minutes marveling in space.

Due to the increase in the number of space tourists at the end of the year, the US aviation authority FAA ended a program in which everyone who was in space received a coveted wing brooch.

"The Astronaut Wings Program, launched in 2004, served its original purpose of bringing more attention to this challenge," says FAA chief Wayne Monteith.

Instead, people who have flown into space would now only be listed on the Internet.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-01-04

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