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Tesla CEO Elon Musk, also the CEO of Space Exploration Technologies Corp., left, sits with guests inside the Manned Dragon V2 Space Taxi in Hawthorne, Calif. The Dragon V2 is capable of sending cargo and up to seven crew members to the International Space Station.
Photo credit: BLOOMBERG
May 30, 2014 - 8:47 am ET
LOS ANGELES (Bloomberg) -- Space Exploration Technologies Corp., the private rocket maker controlled by Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk, said its reusable Space Taxi capsule will be ready to take astronauts to the International Space Station within two years.
The closely held companyâs Dragon V2 spaceship can carry as many as seven people and as much as four tons of cargo, Musk said late Thursday at the SpaceX factory and headquarters in Hawthorne, Calif. Itâs also being designed with legs and re-entry rockets to let it land anywhere back on Earth, he said.
âWe actually expect to be able to transport crew by 2016, a year before NASA needs it,â said Musk, a 42-year-old billionaire who leads electric-car maker Tesla Motors Inc. âWe feel fairly confident weâll be ready.â
The event comes as Musk fights to expand SpaceXâs business with the U.S. beyond NASA missions and get a piece of the $67.6 billion Defense Department budget for satellite launches.Â
Since the retirement of NASA's space shuttle fleet, Russiaâs Soyuz rockets are the sole method of getting astronauts into space. While Russia is currently charging as much as $76 million per mission, SpaceX intends to be able to deliver passengers for less than $20 million, Musk said.
âItâs not only that the Russians are taunting us. They are massively overcharging,â he said.
NASA funding
SpaceX is one of four companies receiving NASA funding to develop rockets and capsules to take astronauts to and from the International Space Station. The others are Boeing, Jeff Bezosâs Blue Origin LLC and Sierra Nevada Corp.
SpaceX has received more than $2.5 billion in NASA funding since 2008 for commercial crew and other ventures, including cargo supply flights to the space station, according to agency figures.
SpaceX won $440 million from NASA in August 2012 to develop a version of the Dragon capsule to carry passengers. Development costs for the companyâs first capsule and the futuristic V2 version displayed Thursday will run to as much as $1 billion to get NASA certification, Musk said.
Tests by the U.S. space agency to certify the V2 for astronaut missions begin this year, SpaceX said.
The California company sent its first Dragon craft to the International Space Station in May 2012 and its latest cargo mission was completed May 18 when a Dragon capsule returned to Earth carrying 3,500 pounds of cargo and scientific samples.
Contact Automotive News
http://www.autonews.com/article/20140530/OEM02/140539996/teslas-musk-says-space-taxi-could-ferry-astronauts-by-2016
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