Skip to main content

Branson aiming to beat Bezos in billionaires’ race to space

Unity 22 Crew
Virgin Galactic

In a brazen display of one-upmanship, Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson is aiming to beat Amazon founder and Blue Origin owner Jeff Bezos to space.

Each company has spent recent years developing its own space tourism service for suborbital rides to the Kármán line, an area 62 miles above Earth that’s widely regarded as the edge of space.

Last month Bezos announced he’ll be riding aboard Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket on July 20 in what will be the company’s first-ever crewed mission following 15 test flights of its suborbital space vehicle.

But in a surprise move that may leave Bezos bristling, Branson announced on Thursday, July 1 that he’ll be riding aboard Virgin Galactic’s rocket-powered VSS Unity for a similar ride to space, with the mission window opening on July 11.

It’s one thing to have a dream of making space more accessible to all; it’s another for an incredible team to collectively turn that dream into reality https://t.co/x0ksfnuEQ3 #Unity22 @virgingalactic pic.twitter.com/3ecEWGXQPp

— Richard Branson (@richardbranson) July 2, 2021

Virgin Galactic’s approaching Unity 22 mission will be the 22nd test flight for Unity and the company’s fourth crewed spaceflight. But the upcoming trip will be the first to transport a full crew of two pilots and four mission specialists — one of whom will be Branson — who will test out the proposed space tourism experience.

Virgin Galactic says it plans to livestream the entire event, with the broadcast kicking off on its website at 9 a.m. ET on the day of the flight.

Commenting on the planned flight, 70-year-old Branson said: “After more than 16 years of research, engineering, and testing, Virgin Galactic stands at the vanguard of a new commercial space industry, which is set to open space to humankind and change the world for good.”

Marketing move

Although Virgin Galactic says the purpose of the mission is to fully test the customer experience, the sudden announcement of a flight schedule that aims to put Branson in space days before fellow billionaire Bezos will look to many like a blatant publicity grab as the race to launch a commercial space tourism service heats up.

Virgin Galactic’s announcement comes a day after Bezos unveiled Wally Funk as the third crew member to join him and his brother on their July 20 flight. The American aviator and Goodwill Ambassador will, at 82, become the oldest person to go to space when she takes the ride later this month.

The experience

Virgin Galactic and Blue Origin will offer slightly different space tourism experiences. Although both the Unity space plane and Blue Origin’s capsule can transport up to six passengers, their flight systems are very different.

Virgin Galactic uses a jet-powered aircraft to carry Unity to as high as 50,000 feet before releasing the space plane for its rocket-powered trip to space, while Blue Origin’s system uses a rocket launch with passengers traveling inside a capsule.

At the end of the experience, Unity glides back for a runway landing while New Shepard’s capsule deploys parachutes for a soft landing in the desert.

Both companies promise their trips will offer stunning views of Earth and several minutes of weightlessness where passengers will be able to float around the cabin.

Virgin Galactic has already been selling seats for $250,000 for its space tourism service. Blue Origin is yet to say how much it will charge for its seats, though the fee is expected to be similar to Virgin Galactic’s.

The official commercial launch of these space tourism services is yet to be announced.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Meet the startup aiming to outshine SpaceX with reusable, 3D printable rockets
Relativity Space CEO, Tim Ellis, standing next to an enormous 3D printing arm that has produced a rocket component.

Back in the days of the Space Race, the two main opposing sides were America and the Soviet Union, as they jostled to achieve space superiority. Today, in the age of private spaceflight, much of the focus is on Elon Musk’s SpaceX, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, and Richard Branson's Virgin Galactic: The battle of three billionaires whose ambitions are too big to remain tethered to Earth’s gravitational pull.

But just like there were more space agencies than NASA and the Soviet space program during the Cold War, there are other promising private space companies today. One of the most exciting is Relativity Space, a Los Angeles-based 3D-printed rocket startup co-founded in 2015 by Tim Ellis and Jordan Noone. With its stated mission objective of “Building Humanity's Multi-Planetary Future,” the up-and-coming space company recently raised another $650 million in Series E funding.

Read more
Elon Musk to fly to the edge of space with Virgin Galactic
Richard Branson with Elon Musk.

Elon Musk has booked a seat with Virgin Galactic for a ride to the edge of space.

The revelation came via the Wall Street Journal on Sunday, July 11, the day that Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson participated in the company’s first fully crewed spaceflight ahead of the launch of a commercial space tourism service.

Read more
Virgin Galactic video shows off weightless experience in spaceplane
Passengers aboard Virgin Galactic's spaceplane experiencing microgravity conditions.

Virgin Galactic launched its first fully crewed trip to the edge of space on Sunday, July 11, with company founder Richard Branson one of four passengers taking a seat aboard the VSS Unity spaceplane.

The 15-minute experience offered us the best look yet at how a Virgin Galactic space tourism ride will unfold when the company starts accepting paying passengers in 2022.

Read more