Spanish tech firm ayes space balloons for passenger flights

Spanish tech firm ayes space balloons for passenger flights

PanARMENIAN.Net - After a string of high-profile setbacks for rocket programmes aimed at one day flying paying customers into space, a Spanish tech firm plans to send stargazers skyward using gas-filled balloons, AFP reports.

Barcelona-based Zero2Infinity aims to harness the same technology used in helium weather balloons to float its first clients to the edge of space within two years, according to CEO Jose Mariano Lopez-Urdiales.

"We are solving the problem with space access in a totally different way. We're getting outside of the atmosphere using cheap, clean, high-altitude balloons -- a technology that is well-understood and mature," he told AFP at the World Space Risk Forum in Dubai.

"From there, the possibilities are endless."

At a cost of 110,000 euros (around $122,000), the trip to the stratosphere will not be cheap, but Mariano believes there will be a big market for people interested in experiencing a few hours as an astronaut.

"Some people want to provide connectivity so we will launch their satellites," he said. "Some people want to get married up there, so we will send them on a ride and the captain of the ship will marry them."

Founded seven years ago, the company has already done over 30 test flights using prototypes to demonstrate the technology.

A number of setbacks have hit other bids to achieve regular passenger space travel in recent years.

In 2014, British billionaire Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic spaceship -- intended to take tourists to the edge of space -- broke up on a test flight, killing a pilot and delaying the firm's space-tourism goals.

In February this year, Virgin Galactic unveiled a new commercial spaceship but underscored that commercial space flights would not be available until it was satisfied it could carry them out safely.

SpaceX, a privately-funded initiative planning to launch a human mission to Mars by 2024, has suffered accidents in testing, most recently when a Falcon 9 rocket exploded on the launchpad in September.

But with balloons, Lopez-Urdiales insisted, the dangers are dramatically minimised.

"You don't have all the explosion risks associated with rockets and you don't have the high-speed re-entry risk," he said.

"We don't even go above the speed of sound."

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