Richard Branson aims at mid-2018 space trip as Virgin Galactic resumes powered tests
“We will never be able to build enough spaceships,” Branson said Wednesday in Hong Kong following the introduction of Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd. flights from Melbourne.

Following the completion of a series of glide-only sorties, powered tests are set to take place every three weeks with the aim of extending them into space by November or December, Branson said in an interview. After his own flight, full commercial passenger operations should start by the end of 2018, he said.
Branson’s update is the most detailed since the October 2014 crash of Virgin Galactic’s original SpaceShipTwo, in which co-pilot Michael Alsbury died when the craft was torn apart after he prematurely unlocked a braking mechanism. While the accident in the Mojave Desert came just months before the planned maiden commercial flight, Branson said the appetite for travel to the edge of space remains undimmed, leaving room for a number of competitors.
“We will never be able to build enough spaceships,” Branson said Wednesday in Hong Kong following the introduction of Virgin Australia Holdings Ltd. flights from Melbourne. “The demand is enormous.”
Bezos, Musk
Branson was an early leader in the new space race after founding Virgin Galactic in 2004. Since then, rivals like the Jeff Bezos-backed Blue Origin LLC and Elon Musk’s Space Exploration Technologies Corp., or SpaceX, have gained momentum by focusing on reusable rockets to cut the cost of space travel.
Blue Origin’s New Shepard rocket has flown to suborbital space five times since November 2015. Suborbital space is high enough for passengers to experience weightlessness, but not high enough to orbit the Earth.
Branson, who turns 67 on July 18, said there’s a role for various launch systems, especially in the deployment of satellites, viewed as a likely mainstay of Virgin Galactic’s future business. The company’s Virgin Orbit arm is working on a two-stage air-launched rocket that would carry small satellites, with test rockets set to be dropped from an aircraft in the first quarter of 2018, the Briton said.
Long Wait
Branson declined to comment directly on Donald Trump’s June 30 announcement that he’ll revive a Cold War-era council that helped shape space policy, or on the U.S. president’s suggestion that private companies are set to play “an important role” in the next phase of space technology.
Virgin Galactic will also play a role in developing elements of Boom Technologies’s planned supersonic plane, Branson said, and will build parts of the XB-1 demonstrator on which the U.S. startup plans to commence work before the end of this year, according to
Branson, a vocal opponent of the U.K. leaving the European Union, said he’s hopeful the country is now headed for a Brexit “kinder” to business following the outcome of May’s general election, which left the ruling Conservatives with fewer seats and dependent on the support of a smaller party.
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