Thanks to government investment, commercial space travel is becoming a reality

Governments are always at their best when they meet national needs while helping grow industrial capacity

Richard Branson
Wednesday 17 September 2014 14:56 EDT
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In this handout provided by NASA from the the Earth-orbiting International Space Station, weather system Arthur travels up the east coast of the United States in the Atlantic Ocean near Florida in space. The robotic arm of the Space Station Remote Manipul
In this handout provided by NASA from the the Earth-orbiting International Space Station, weather system Arthur travels up the east coast of the United States in the Atlantic Ocean near Florida in space. The robotic arm of the Space Station Remote Manipul

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This past May, I was part of a Virgin Disruptors panel called “Have entrepreneurs lost the will to innovate?” Among many threads was the question of the role of governments in innovation. Are they a hindrance or do they encourage innovation?

While I’ve had my share of battles with governments, I recognize that they have paved the way in critical areas such as space exploration.

Five decades after the first human went to space, we are in the midst of a commercial space revolution. Private companies have proved there is a market for commercial space travel: for example, Virgin Galactic have signed up more future astronauts than the total of people who have ever gone to space. This technology will benefit broader societal applications. At Galactic we will also send up NASA experiments, while making it significantly cheaper for researchers to access space and for companies to launch low-cost satellites. Those experiments and satellites will both help us explore the unknown and improve life here on Earth.

It all started with government investing in an untested field, then partnering with commercial companies for advancement and commercial applications. This is what’s happening with the announcement that NASA will contract with the private sector to send its astronauts to low-earth orbit. In a few years, American spaceflight to the International Space Station will be the province of private firms, freeing NASA to focus on technologies and on human exploration of the Moon and Mars. This is government at its best – meeting national needs while helping pave the way toward new markets and growing industrial capacity.

Many astronauts experience the ‘overview effect’: a new relationship with earth and humanity, after seeing our planet without borders. It is important that countries continue to collaborate in space exploration, and it’s equally exciting for governments to help catalyse the growth of commercial ventures and work with us to broaden access to space.

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