The Guardian Australia

‘Peeing is very easy’: Japanese billionair­e returns to Earth after documentin­g life on ISS

- Agence France-Presse

A Japanese billionair­e has returned to Earth after 12 days spent on the Internatio­nal Space Station, where he made videos about performing mundane tasks in space including brushing his teeth and going to the toilet.

Online fashion tycoon Yusaku Maezawa and his assistant Yozo Hirano parachuted on to Kazakhstan’s steppe at around the expected landing time of 03.13 GMT on Monday, along with Russian cosmonaut Alexander Misurkin, Russia’s space agency said.

“The flight of the ‘tourist’ spacecraft Soyuz MS-20 has been completed,” Roscosmos said in a statement on its website.

The journey marked Russia’s return to space tourism after a decade-long pause that saw the rise of competitio­n from the US.

The trio spent 12 days on the orbiting laboratory, where the Japanese tourists documented their daily life aboard the ISS for Maezawa’s popular YouTube channel.

Addressing his 1 million followers on YouTube, the 46-year-old billionair­e explained how to brush teeth and go to the toilet in space. In one of the videos, he explained in detail the business of relieving oneself on the ISS.

“Peeing is very easy,” he said as he demonstrat­ed a handheld funnel astronauts use to suck urine away.

In other videos, he showed his followers how to properly drink tea and sleep in zero gravity.

When the three space travellers arrived on the ISS on 8 December, they joined a seven-team crew who were engaged in space biology and physics research.

Maezawa plans to take eight people with him on a 2023 mission around the moon, operated by Elon Musk’s SpaceX. He and his assistant are the first private Japanese citizens to visit space since journalist Toyohiro Akiyama travelled to the Mir station in 1990.

Their return from space caps a banner year that many have seen as a turning point for private space travel.

Billionair­es Musk, Jeff Bezos and Richard Branson all made breakthrou­gh commercial tourism flights this year, bursting into a market Russia is keen to defend.

Russia has a history of sending selffunded tourists to space. In partnershi­p with US-based company Space Adventures, Roscosmos has previously taken seven tourists to the ISS since 2001 – one of them twice.

The last was Canada’s Cirque du Soleil co-founder Guy Laliberte, who was dubbed the first clown in space, in 2009.

In October, Russia launched its first untrained cosmonauts into space since Laliberte’s trip, delivering a Russian actress and a director to the ISS, where they filmed scenes for the first movie in orbit.

Moscow had stopped sending tourists to space after Nasa retired its space shuttle in 2011, which left Russia with a monopoly on supplying the ISS.

Nasa bought up all Soyuz launch seats for a reported $90m per spot – effectivel­y ending tourist flights. That changed last year when a SpaceX spacecraft successful­ly delivered its first astronauts to the ISS.

Nasa began purchasing flights from SpaceX, stripping Russia of its monopoly and costing its cash-strapped space agency millions of dollars in revenue.

The cost of tickets to space for tourists has not been disclosed but Space Adventures has indicated they are in the range of $50m-60m.

Roscosmos plans to continue growing its space tourism business, already commission­ing two Soyuz rockets for such trips.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Yusaku Maezawa emerges from the Soyuz capsule in Kazakhstan with the help of a Russian space agency team after touching down from the space tourism trip.
Photograph: AP Yusaku Maezawa emerges from the Soyuz capsule in Kazakhstan with the help of a Russian space agency team after touching down from the space tourism trip.
 ?? Photograph: Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images ?? A live broadcast from the Soyuz capsule’s landing site is shown at Russia’s mission control centre in Korolyov outside Moscow.
Photograph: Alexander Nemenov/AFP/Getty Images A live broadcast from the Soyuz capsule’s landing site is shown at Russia’s mission control centre in Korolyov outside Moscow.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia