Nasa's space tourism coming in 2020: what you need to know

11 June 2019 - 05:30 By Unathi Nkanjeni
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For a short stay at the International Space Centre you''ll have to be rich and as fit as a real astronaut.
For a short stay at the International Space Centre you''ll have to be rich and as fit as a real astronaut.
Image: 123rf.com/profile_forplayday

NASA plans to allow tourists to visit the International Space Station (ISS) from 2020.

According to Nasa, ISS will support the growth of commercial space activities in low-Earth orbit. Private spaceflight will allow Nasa to turn its attention to Mars exploration while enabling more people than ever to experience space.

Here is what you need to know:

Cost to visit space

A one-night stay will be priced at $35,000 and there will be up to two short private astronaut missions a year.

Nasa said the missions will be for stays of up to 30 days. Calculate these costs over 30 days and the bill jumps to more than $1m (R14.9m). With each short-duration stay including four seats, Nasa could earn as much as $4.2m (R62.6m) per mission.

As many as a dozen private astronauts could visit the ISS each year.

How Nasa’s space tourism will work

Tourists will be shipped to the orbiter by the two companies currently developing transport vehicles for Nasa: SpaceX, with its Crew Dragon capsule, and Boeing.

These companies will choose the clients and bill for the trip to the ISS, which will be the most expensive part of the adventure - around $58m (R865m) for a round trip ticket.

That is the average rate the companies will bill Nasa for taking the space adventurers to the ISS. However, tourists will also pay NASA for their stay in space, for food, water and use of the life support system on the orbiter.

Training for amateur astronauts

Nasa won't be vetting the incoming crews. That is the responsibility of the companies, who will need to make sure that prospective private astronauts "meet Nasa's medical standards and the training and certification procedures for International Space Station crew members."

So for a stay at the ISS, not only do you need to be rich, you will also need to be as fit and as trained as a real astronaut.


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