UPDATE: Story first
posted 1:15 p.m. December 9, 2008
The
public space travel company, Virgin Galactic, has identified a new departure
point for flying people to the suborbital heights: New Mexico.
Adventurer
and British businessman, Sir Richard Branson -- who founded Virgin Galactic in
the mid-1990s as one of over 250 business entities inside the Virgin empire--will
reportedly outline flight operations in the state next week with New Mexico
Governor Bill Richardson.
State
economic development officials confirm that Virgin Galactic's interest in
utilizing the New Mexico spaceport will be detailed in a December 14 press
gathering at the New Mexico State Capitol Building in Santa Fe.
"It's the biggest
event in the space industry in the last decade," said Rick Homans,
Spaceport Authority Chairman and New Mexico Economic Development Department
Secretary.
We'll
be announcing a very strong and bold partnership between the state of New Mexico and Virgin Galactic," Homans told SPACE.com. "We expect that people will
be traveling into space from New Mexico in the next three to four years...and not
just one or two but hundreds of people and eventually thousands of people...to
experience what space travel is all about."
Accelerate innovation
Homans
said he expected the agreement will accelerate the level of innovation, not only
in suborbital travel, but orbital and even lunar travel. "That's where this
industry is headed, and that's what New Mexico views as the great opportunity,"
he said.
"Virgin
is the best anchor tenant one could hope for," Homans said. "It's a pretty simple
agreement, but it has a lot of ramifications for the state and for Virgin
Galactic. It's a very deep and important commitment to one another to launch
this new industry here in the state of New Mexico."
Next
week's announcement will put a lot of wheels in motion, Homans added, and
"opens the opportunity for New Mexico to move forward with construction of its
spaceport."
Spaceport authority
New
Mexico
has already begun blueprinting the still-to-be-built spaceport.
The
New Mexico spaceport is to be located near Upham, roughly 45 miles north of Las Cruces and 30 miles east of Truth or Consequences. The now barren stretch of land
covers some 27 square miles, having a north-south configuration.
Work
is also underway preparing the necessary Environmental Impact Statement
paperwork - documentation needed to obtain a spaceport license.
Since
1996, the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) Office of the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation (AST) has licensed five
spaceports in the United States: California Spaceport at Vandenberg Air Force
Base, Spaceport Florida at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, the Virginia Space
Flight Center at Wallops Island, Kodiak Launch Complex on Kodiak Island, Alaska, and Mojave Airport in California.
Regarding
the Branson deal with New Mexico, Patti Grace Smith, Associate Administrator
for AST told SPACE.com: "We have no information beyond what's appeared
in the press. But those reports are entirely consistent with the mounting
interest in private human space flight. It has a bright future, and that future
might be even closer than expected."
Suborbital spaceships
Branson's Virgin Galactic will own and operate privately
built suborbital spaceships, based on SpaceShipOne's design that repeatedly
flew to the edge of space last year. That rocket plane was fabricated by
aerospace designer Burt Rutan and his team at Scaled Composites in Mojave, California.
Virgin
Galactic officials have stated in the past that they expect to create around
3,000 astronauts over five years time. The price per seat on each flight--which
will include at least three days of pre-flight training--has been price tagged
at $190,000.
Last
week, Alex Tai, Director of Operations at Virgin Galactic, spoke of the firm's
progress in creating the first commercially-viable passenger spaceline at a
meeting of the California Space Authority (CSA), held in Los Angeles, California.
Tai
oversees the design and building of a fleet of SpaceShipTwo vehicles now on
order with Scaled Composites.
Earlier
this year, Branson teamed up with Rutan to establish The Spaceship Company, a
joint venture formed to build the commercial suborbital spaceships and launch
aircraft.
Tai
noted that Virgin Galactic has placed an order for five spaceships--vehicles
that are expected to be delivered sometime within the next couple of years, he
said.
Pro-active states
"We're
deep in the engineering program for developing SpaceShipTwo," Tai told the CSA
gathering. He pointed out that Virgin Galactic already has some 33,000 registered
applications for suborbital flights, as well as received over $10 million in
deposits for future suborbital flights.
Tai
said that the research and development phase for SpaceShipTwo "will work for us
at Mojave quite well," including early operations of the spaceliner. But
additional sites to handle public space travel venues were in the offing, he
suggested.
"Other
states are being exceptionally pro-active," Tai explained, such as New Mexico, Florida, Utah, and Nevada. "They want the business. California does need to
step up a little bit and start becoming...more pro-active."
Spaceport inaugural flight
Prior
to Virgin Galactic's prospective use of the New Mexico spaceport, unpiloted
suborbital rocket flights are already on tap.
"Everything
is right on schedule for our March 27 space launch to inaugurate the New Mexico spaceport," said Eric Knight, chief executive officer for UP Aerospace, Inc.,
based in Unionville, Connecticut.
"Our
SpaceLoft XL vehicle will be the primary spacecraft that we will be launching
from the New Mexico spaceport," Knight told SPACE.com. The group's
suborbital rocket flights can accommodate scientific, research, and commercial
payloads.
"It's
the workhorse vehicle of our fleet. We believe it has the lowest
cost-per-pound of any space transportation system in the world," Knight added.
"It's
exciting to be conducting the first space launch from what will be a grand
facility," Knight said. "After our rocket flies into space...New Mexico will fulfill a 15-year dream to create an operational spaceport and usher in this new
era of space commercialization."