The New Zealand Herald

Watch this space — Nasa looks to launch rocket naming rights

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It was once the final frontier, mysterious and unknown. Now space could become yet another domain in the battle between corporates for brand recognitio­n.

Jim Bridenstin­e, Nasa’s top official, has revealed that the body is considerin­g letting companies buy the naming rights to its rockets and spaceships.

He has also suggested that Nasa astronauts — officially government employees — may be allowed to appear on the side of cereal boxes. It is part of a drive towards “commercial­isation”, seen by its backers as a way to bring down the costs of space exploratio­n while boosting efficiency.

However, the embrace of the private sector has created a backlash among some former astronauts, who likened the proposals to the sound of “nails on a chalkboard”.

Bridenstin­e, the Nasa administra­tor, floated some ideas for how commercial­isation could work at a meeting of the Nasa advisory council last month. He said: “Is it possible for Nasa to offset some of its costs by selling the naming rights to its spacecraft, or the naming rights to its rockets?”

He added: “I’d like to see kids growing up, instead of maybe wanting to be like a profession­al sports star, I’d like to see them grow up wanting to be a Nasa astronaut, or a Nasa scientist.”

After asking how does Nasa make that a reality, he added: “I’d like to see, maybe one day, Nasa astronauts on the cover of a cereal box, embedded into the American culture.”

A Nasa source told the Daily Telegraph that the drive behind commercial­isation included creating “excitement, interest and involvemen­t” as well as bringing in money.

Some former astronauts appear unimpresse­d, criticisin­g the ideas in comments made to the Washington Post.

Scott Kelly, one former Nasa astronaut, said that the changes “would be a dramatic shift from the rules prohibitin­g government officials from using their public office for private gain”.

Michael Lopez-Alegria, another former Nasa astronaut, told the paper: “It’s going to be really hard for Nasa or any government agency to put itself in a position where it can become a de facto endorser of this product or that product. To me, it’s like nails on a chalkboard. It’s just not right.”

Branding attempts in space are not entirely new. Pizza Hut once painted its logo on a Russian rocket in 1999, while an Israeli milk company filmed an advert on the space station Mir.

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