The Mercury News

Boeing races Musk to Mars

CEO says he sees a future that will resemble “The Jetsons”

- By Julie Johnsson Bloomberg News

“I’m convinced the first person to step foot on Mars will arrive there riding a Boeing rocket.” — Dennis Muilenburg, CEO, Boeing

Boeing once helped the U.S. beat the Soviet Union in the race to the moon. Now the company intends to go toe-to-toe with newcomers such as billionair­e Elon Musk in the next era of space exploratio­n and commerce.

Boeing Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg sketched out a Jetsons-like future at a conference Tuesday, envisionin­g a commercial space-travel market with dozens of destinatio­ns orbiting the Earth and hypersonic aircraft shuttling travelers between continents in two hours or less. And Boeing intends to be a key player in the initial push to send humans to Mars, maybe even beating Musk to his long-time goal.

“I’m convinced the first person to step foot on Mars will arrive there riding a Boeing rocket,” Muilenburg said at the Chicago event on innovation, which was sponsored by the Atlantic magazine.

Like Musk’s SpaceX, Boeing is focused on building out the commercial space sector near earth as spacefligh­t becomes more routine, while developing technology to venture far beyond the moon.

The Chicago-based aerospace giant is working with the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion to develop a heavy-lift rocket called the Space Launch System for deep space exploratio­n. Boeing and SpaceX are also the first commercial companies NASA selected to ferry astronauts to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Musk last week welcomed competitor­s as he unveiled a SpaceX craft that would dwarf the workhorse of Apollo missions of a half-century ago, hauling 100 travelers to Mars with cruise-ship-style amenities.

“The goal of SpaceX really is to build the transport system. It’s like building the Union Pacific railroad,” Musk told a space conference, as he laid out a plan to bring travel to Mars to a mass market with tickets priced one day as low as $100,000.

Boeing built the first stage for the Saturn V, the most powerful U.S. rocket ever built, which took men to the moon. Nowadays, Muilenburg sees space tourism closer to home “blossoming over the next couple of decades into a viable commercial market.” The Internatio­nal Space Station could be joined in low-earth orbit by dozens of hotels and companies pursuing microgravi­ty manufactur­ing and research, he said.

“I think it’s a fascinatin­g area for us,” he said.

Muilenburg said Boeing will make spacecraft for the new era of tourists. He also sees potential for hypersonic aircraft, traveling at upwards of three times the speed of sound.

Boeing and Lockheed Martin are among the space heavyweigh­ts developing experiment­al aircraft that could fly U.S. travelers at speeds right out of a science fiction movie.

Lockheed’s Falcon Hypersonic Technology Vehicle 2 is being designed to zip through the sky at Mach 20 (about 13,000 miles per hour), flying between New York and Los Angeles in 12 minutes. Boeing’s X-51A WaveRider, which relied on its own shock waves for compressio­n lift, reached Mach 5.1 in 2013.

Costs will need to drop substantia­lly before these experiment­al spacecraft can be seriously considered for commercial use, Muilenburg said.

“That business model isn’t closed yet. At some point it will,” he said. “The future of innovation has to include not only the technology, but economic viability.”

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