Space
tourism firm to build spaceport in Persian Gulf
Originally at
http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/worldbiz/archives/2006/02/20/2003293879
BLOOMBERG
Monday, Feb 20, 2006,Page 12
A day after Space Adventures announced it was in a venture to develop
rocket ships for suborbital flights, the company said on Friday it plans
to build a US$265 million spaceport in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The commercial spaceport would be based in Ras Al-Khaimah near the southern
end of the Persian Gulf, and the UAE government has made an initial
investment of US$30 million, the Arlington, Virginia-based company said
in a statement.
The spaceport announcement comes on the heels of Space Adventures'
new partnership with an investment firm founded by major sponsors of
the Ansari X Prize to develop rocket ships for suborbital flights.
The agreement between Space Adventures and the Texas-based venture
capital firm Prodea would help finance suborbital vehicles being designed
and built by the Russian aerospace firm Myasishchev Design Bureau.
Space Adventures is best known for sending the first three space tourists
to the orbiting international space station for a reported US$20 million
a person.
Space Adventures' jump into the infant suborbital flight industry comes
at a time when several companies already are designing spaceships to
take paying passengers on short trips up into space and then back to
Earth without circling the globe.
Last December, British tycoon Richard Branson announced development
of a US$225 million spaceport in southern New Mexico, which will be
the headquarters of Branson's Virgin Galactic space tourism company.
Virgin Galactic is contracting with Burt Rutan's Scaled Composites
to develop a suborbital spaceship based on SpaceShipOne technology.
Flying out of Mojave, California, SpaceShipOne made history on June
21, 2004, as the first privately financed manned rocket to reach space.
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