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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

UBS: sees human spaceflight as a $23 billion industry by 2030

By Sam Unsted Bloomberg

Flying people to hang out in outer space could be worth $23 billion by 2030, UBS Group AG predicted.

Space hotels, theme park rides and flying wealthy long-haul passengers into orbit are among the opportunities to tap once the space industry gets off the ground, UBS analysts Jarrod Castle and Myles Walton said. The total space industry could be worth around $805 billion by then, they said, with commercial aviation carving out around $20 billion of that and tourism accounting for around $3 billion.

While some might consider the potential for space “to service the long-haul travel market on earth as science fiction, we think that, as space technology continues to evolve and costs fall” airlines may embrace the idea, Castle and Walton said. Long-haul routes of 10 hours or more carrying affluent and time-sensitive customers could utilize space travel, the analysts said.

Companies like SpaceX and Virgin Galactic Ltd. are investing heavily to eventually bring tourists into space. At present, the race is focused on resuming crewed flights of U.S. astronauts. SpaceX sent the unmanned Crew Dragon to the International Space Station earlier last month and is working toward sending up a manned mission. Two Virgin Galactic pilots breached the Earth’s atmosphere on a test flight in December.

Passengers appear willing to try it, but prices would need to fall for it to become mainstream. A UBS survey found respondents would be more comfortable traveling on a spaceship than on a pilot-less plane.