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Prospective space travelers have so far placed deposits totaling more than $31 million for tickets that cost $200,000 each and will give them five minutes in space, Alex Tai, the company's group director, said Thursday in an interview at the Singapore Airshow.
"In the short term, we have firm orders for five spaceships and options for seven...We believe there is a very strong market," Tai said.
About 80,000 people from 120 countries have shown interest in these commercial space flights, which are likely to start in 2010. Seriously interested travelers are asked to deposit at least $20,000, according to Virgin Galactic's Web site. "It's silly to divide the $200,000 by that five minutes. It really is a life-time experience," Tai said.
Virgin, which aims to be the first to take paying passengers into space on a regular basis, will invest $250 million in the space program, Tai said.
He declined to give the cost of each craft or the maker, though some parts will come from Pratt & Whitney, the jet engine unit of United Technologies Corp
Asked when the company would become profitable, Tai said: "I imagine it will be inside the first five years."
Virgin's SpaceShipTwo, unveiled last month and to be tested later this year, will be able to carry eight people into suborbital space. Virgin aims to start with one flight a week before ramping it up to 14 flights a week, Tai said.
For $200,000, Virgin will prepare space travelers over three days for their two-hour flight beyond Earth's atmosphere that will culminate in five minutes in space. The three-day program will include simulating a zero-gravity environment, showing travelers what it means to accelerate and decelerate quickly, as well as what the Earth looks like from space, Tai said. The spaceship will initially be launched from Mojave, Calif., but will eventually take off from a space port in New Mexico.
Virgin Galactic is one of several high-profile contenders in the new commercial space race.
Others include Astrium, the space arm of European aerospace firm EADS; Blue Origin, started by Amazon.com Inc founder Jeff Bezos; Space Exploration Technologies (SpaceX), created by PayPal founder Elon Musk; and Bigelow Aerospace, a venture aimed at creating space hotels, started by hotelier Robert Bigelow.
The leader in the budding sector is Virginia-based Space Adventures, which started the space tourism phenomenon in 2001 when it put U.S. businessman Dennis Tito on a Russian Soyuz craft for a reported $20 million.
Story Copyright © 2008 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.


