The National - News

The world’s richest men prepare for take-off

▶ While government investment in the space race has dwindled as they tackle matters closer to home, a group of super-rich enthusiast­s have taken up the challenge

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Space exploratio­n has never seemed closer or more exciting. The UAE is planning its 2021 Mars Mission and tomorrow Alia Al Mansoori, the winner of our Genes in Space competitio­n, will watch from Cape Canaveral as her experiment is launched to the Internatio­nal Space Station on a giant SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. To mark this historic moment, the second of our three-part series looks at the new space race, one that links government­s and private industry, including some of the biggest names in business, as they compete to advance our knowledge of outer space

Deep pockets have always been needed to conquer deep space. At the height of the race to put the first man on the Moon, the American space agency, Nasa, was spending nearly 5 per cent of all US government expenditur­e.

Nasa today must make do with barely a tenth of its former riches. Its annual budget is now just 0.47 of US public spending. Space exploratio­n funded by government­s has largely dwindled everywhere as politician­s grapple with more down-to-earth problems.

And yet we are living in a new golden age of space exploratio­n. These new lords of the universe are fuelled not by taxpayers, but shareholde­rs and vast private fortunes. Private enterprise believes it can rival any nation in space, and do it faster and cheaper.

Taken together, their net worth is close to US$220 billion – more than 10 times the annual budget for Nasa and higher than the gross domestic product of Portugal.

Google, which is sponsoring a $30 million prize to land on the Moon within the next year, is worth an estimated $565bn, with annual revenues of almost $30bn. The combined budgets of the top 10 space nations, including Russia and China, is $39.7bn.

The names and the companies they built are household names. They also represent the spirit of our digital age, in which wealth is accumulate­d in ways and quantities unthinkabl­e even 20 years ago – Jeff Bezos of Amazon, Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, and Google and Tesla.

These are natural-born risk takers. In space they see the chance to increase their wealth and power, whether it is mining asteroids or flying the first tourists to the Moon. Like most rich men they seek to become richer.

But they also embrace the romance and thrill of the challenge.

Many were children or not even born when Neil Armstrong took his “giant leap for mankind” but, perhaps more significan­tly, they did grow up in the age of Star Wars and Star Trek as their influences. The urge to boldly go is part of their DNA.

They do not say “why”, but “why not?”

JEFF BEZOS

53, American (Amazon) ▶ Estimated net worth: $78.4bn ▶ Company: Blue Origin The founder of the world’s largest internet sales company, Mr Bezos started Blue Origin in 2000, with the goal of making space flight cheaper and more reliable. With the New Shepherd (named after Alan Shephard, the first American in space), the company pioneered a reusable firststage rocket capable of landing under its own power. Its manned capsule could begin test flights as soon as the end of this year, with the goal of commercial flights and a new age of space tourism by 2018. While Mr Bezos prefers to keep the details of the project under wraps, he revealed recently he is cashing in $1bn in Amazon stock every year to fund Blue Origin.

“If we can make access to space low cost, then entreprene­urs will be unleashed, you will see creativity, you will see dynamism, you will see the same thing in space that I’ve witnessed on the internet over the past 20 years,” Mr Bezos says.

ELON MUSK

45, South African (Tesla) ▶ Estimated net worth: $13.9bn ▶ Company: SpaceX Visionary businessma­n, inventor and entreprene­ur, Mr Musk made his first $100 million with the sale of PayPal to eBay, built the first electric sport car at Tesla and planned to build a high-speed hyperloop train that will connect Los Angeles and San Francisco in 30 minutes for the price of a bus ticket. SpaceX was founded in 2002 with the dual ambition of slashing the cost of space travel and colonising Mars. His Falcon 1 was the first rocket to achieve a vertical landing of its first stage on an orbital flight and SpaceX has already flown 10 resupply missions to the Internatio­nal Space Station in a contract with Nasa. His Dragon reusable spacecraft has been contracted to fly two wealthy people around the Moon next year – the first lunar tourists. In the long term, his Mars Colonial Transport provision seeks to send humans to the Red Planet about 2024, with a manned return to the Moon also on the cards.

“In terms of people going to Mars, I think this is something that could be accomplish­ed in about 10 years – maybe sooner, maybe nine years. I need to make sure SpaceX doesn’t die between now and then, and that I don’t die,” Mr Musk says.

SIR RICHARD BRANSON

66, British (Virgin Group) ▶ Estimated net worth: $4.9bn ▶ Company: Virgin Galactic Starting with a mail-order record company, Mr Branson has built the Virgin Group into one of the world’s most recognised brands, with the Virgin Atlantic airline as its crown jewel. Virgin Galactic was founded in 2004, with the initial goal of offering suborbital space flight at $250,000 a ticket and with more than 600 customers already said to have signed on, including a compliment­ary seat for the theoretica­l physicist Stephen Hawking. Investors include the Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund, with a stake estimated at about 37.8 per cent. After building a spaceport in New Mexico, the project suffered a serious setback in 2014 when its SpaceShipT­wo craft VSS Enterprise broke apart shortly after being released from the White Knight mother ship, killing the co-pilot. The replacemen­t, VSS Unity, made its first unpowered test flight in December, but Virgin Galactic is now placing greater emphasis on its small satellite launcher, Virgin Orbit.

“Space is hard but worth it. We will persevere and move forward together,” Mr Branson says.

MARK ZUCKERBERG

32, American (Facebook) ▶ Estimated net worth: $53.8bn

YURI MILNER

55, Russian (Digital Sky Technologi­es) ▶ Estimated net worth: $3bn ▶ Company: Breakthrou­gh Starshot The fifth richest person in the world thanks to Facebook, Zuckerberg is only 32, with an establishe­d record as a philanthro­pist and talk of him one day running for president of the US. In his most recent experience with space, a satellite he had funded to provide fast internet to Africa was destroyed when Elon Musk’s Falcon rocket blew up on the launch pad last year.

Milner is a Russian venture capitalist and physicist now living in California whose investment­s include the WhatsApp Messenger and Airbnb. With the support of Stephen Hawking, he last year announced the $100m Breakthrou­gh Starshot project, using tiny “nano craft” robotic probes that will use a system of light-beam propulsion to reach the Alpha Centauri star system in 20 years, rather than the 30,000 years it would take using convention­al rockets. After travelling 25 trillion miles, they will send back images and other data to Earth, including any evidence of alien life.

“I’m deeply disappoint­ed to hear that SpaceX’s launch failure destroyed our satellite that would have provided connectivi­ty to so many entreprene­urs and everyone else across the continent,” Mr Zuckerberg says.

Mr Milner says: “The human story is one of great leaps. Today we are preparing for the next great leap, to the stars. Can we literally reach the stars, and can we do it in our lifetime?”

ROBERT BIGELOW

72, American (Bigelow Group) ▶ Estimated net worth: $1bn ▶ Company: Bigelow Aerospace The owner of the Budget Suites of America hotel chain, Mr Bigelow grew up in Las Vegas and witnessed some of

the first atomic bomb tests as a child. His hotels and property interests, he says, were only created to make him wealthy enough to explore his true passion – space travel. Bigelow Aerospace was started in 1999, with the intention of building habitable modules that could form an orbiting space station. His

Genesis I and Genesis II modules were placed into orbit on Russian rockets in 2006 and 2007, but his most notable success came last year when his experiment­al expanding space module, the Bigelow Expandable Activity Module was attached to the Internatio­nal Space Station in a contract with Nasa. Mr Bigelow is working with Boeing on the CST-100 Starliner, a new crew capsule expected to make its first manned flight within a year. He is a strong proponent of the view that the future of space travel lies away from government bodies and with the private sector.

“Nasa is on its knees. It has had a terrible record over the past 30 years and you say, ‘why should the private sector get involved?’ The answer really is, why not?” Mr Bigelow says.

PAUL ALLEN

64, American (co-founder Microsoft) ▶ Estimate net worth: $15.8bn ▶ Company: Stratolaun­ch Systems As the co-founder of Microsoft, he might not have quite as much cash as his former partner Bill Gates, but is still the 40th wealthiest person on the planet, pursuing his passion projects that include a hockey club and an American football team, along with an institute for artificial intelligen­ce, a TV and film production company and donating $100m to fight ebola. Oh, and three megayachts. Mr Allen’s billions also funded SpaceShipO­ne, the prototype for the Virgin Galactic ships and the winner of the $10m Ansari X prize in 2004 for the first private company to achieve two suborbital flights of a manned and reusable craft within two weeks. Stratolaun­ch Systems was formed in 2010 with the objective of a three-stage launch system that can send payloads into space from a high-altitude carrier. Despite delays, it is hoped the test flight of the first-stage Stratolaun­ch aircraft – with twice the wingspan of a Boeing 747 – will take place this year.

“I think it’s going to be great if people can buy a ticket to fly up and see black sky and the stars. I’d like to do it myself – but probably after it has flown a serious number of times first,” Mr Allen says. Best known for plumbing the depths with the multi-Oscar-winning Titanic and his subsequent expedition to locate the real wreck, the filmmaker also ventured into distant star systems in Avatar. While Cameron is still a few dollars short of the billionair­es club, he is one of the investors in Planetary Resources, created in 2012 with the objective of mining asteroids for precious metals. If Cameron is a relative pauper in this company, it cannot be said of investors Larry Page, the world’s 27th richest man, and Eric Schmidt, the executive chairman of Google’s parent company Alphabet. The first stage of the project is to launch space telescopes to search for suitable asteroids. Of the two test satellites, one was destroyed in a launch accident in 2014 while the other was successful­ly sent the following year. No date has been given yet for the first full-scale asteroid detection satellite.

“I had read tons of science fiction. I was fascinated by other worlds, other environmen­ts. For me, it was fantasy, but it was not fantasy in the sense of pure escapism,” Cameron says.

Mr Page says: “If you’re not doing some things that are crazy, then you’re doing the wrong things.”

Mr Schmidt says: ”If everything seems under control, you’re just not going fast enough.”

NAVEEN JAIN

Indian/American (Intellius) ▶ Net worth (claimed): $2.2bn ▶ Company: Moon Express The Indian-born businessma­n and entreprene­ur made his first fortune with the internet service provider InfoSpace, then promptly lost most of it in the dot.com bubble crash of 2001. Rebuilding his wealth, Mr Jain claims to be worth $2bn and in 2010 founded Moon Express, which ultimately seeks to exploit the Moon’s natural resources for commercial purposes. In the short term, the company has set the goal of winning the $30m Google Lunar XPrize, awarded to the first privately funded team to put a lander on the Moon, travel 500 metres and transmit photograph­s and video back to Earth. To win it, Moon Express must reach a launch deadline of December this year and has bought two launch slots from Rocket Lab’s Electron twostage launch vehicle, which has not yet made its maiden flight.

“When we land on the Moon, it shows that the entreprene­urs are now capable of doing things that were only done by the superpower­s,” Mr Jain says.

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 ?? Getty Images; AP; AFP ?? Clockwise from above, SpaceX’s Falcon 9; Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Galactic; Naveen Jain of Moon Express; Robert Bigelow of Bigelow Aerospace; Elon Musk of SpaceX; and Jeff Bezos of Blue Origin
Getty Images; AP; AFP Clockwise from above, SpaceX’s Falcon 9; Sir Richard Branson of Virgin Galactic; Naveen Jain of Moon Express; Robert Bigelow of Bigelow Aerospace; Elon Musk of SpaceX; and Jeff Bezos of Blue Origin
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