Ahead of Bezos flight, US approves Blue Origin’s licence for space travel

Ahead of Bezos flight, US approves Blue Origin’s licence for space travel

The trip comes a week after rival Virgin Galactic sent a crew to the edge of space.

Bezos is set to fly to the edge of space on Blue Origin’s maiden crewed voyage on July 20. (File pic)
SEATTLE:
The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) said on Monday it approved a Blue Origin licence to carry humans on the New Shepard launch system into space.

Former Amazon.com Chief Executive Jeff Bezos is set to fly to the edge of space on Blue Origin’s maiden crewed voyage on July 20.

Blue Origin is authorised to carry humans while its FAA licence is valid through August and is approved to conduct these missions from its Launch Site One facility in Texas, the agency confirmed.

Blue Origin was required to verify its launch vehicle’s hardware and software worked safely during a test flight and the FAA confirmed it met regulatory requirements.

Blue Origin’s flight will come a little over a week after space-tourism rival Virgin Galactic successfully sent a crew including its founder, British billionaire Richard Branson, to the edge of space.

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin, as well as the space firm founded by rival billionaire Elon Musk, are working to usher in a new era of routine commercial civilian space travel in what has been popularised as the “billionaire space race”.

Proving rocket travel is safe for the public is key to developing what the Swiss-based investment bank UBS estimates will be a US$3 billion annual space tourism market in a decade.

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