Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

NASA Announced Plans To Open The ISS To Space Tourism In 2020

NASA Announced Plans To Open The ISS To Space Tourism In 2020

The International Space Station

NASA

NASA has announced intentions to open the International Space Station up to new commercial opportunities such as space tourism from 2020.


Up to two short-duration private astronaut missions per year to the space station will be available through privately funded, dedicated commercial spaceflights, the agency said.

Nasa will continue to carry out its own research in low-Earth orbit, but wants to work with private companies on testing new technologies, training astronauts and “strengthening the burgeoning space economy".

The move will allow private astronaut missions on the ISS for a maximum of 30 days, leaving from a US spacecraft.

Companies will be responsible for determining their crew and ensuring they are able to meet the agency's strict medical standards and training procedures.

William Gerstenmaier, Nasa's associate administrator for the human exploration and operations mission directorate, admitted that the decision was a huge shift for the agency, despite already allowing more than 50 companies to conduct some research and development on board.

“The private sector will have the opportunity to think creatively and create new markets," he said.

“Nasa's approach is designed to lower but not totally remove the risk for the private sector, entrepreneurs and companies.

“Nasa is allowing the private sector access to the ISS to enable the next-generation of lower-Earth orbit research facilities.

“Nasa realizes that we need help, we can't do this alone, we need everyone to help us moving forward.

“We're reaching out to the US private sector to see if we can push the economic frontier into space."

Last year, the ISS celebrated 20 years since being launched into orbit.

In November 1998 the first piece was sent into space but it remained unmanned until nearly two years later, when American astronaut William Shepherd along with Russian cosmonauts Sergei Krikalev and Yuri Gidzenko went on board on October 30 2000.

The ISS has been inhabited every day since and crew members carry out research they would not be able to do on Earth.

However, main construction was not completed until 2011, when the final module was installed, and it looks set to be decommissioned by 2028.

People are excited about NASA's most recent announcement.





Zetus Lapetus.

More from News

The golden Oscar statue as seen at The Academy's 96th Oscars .
Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images

Oscar voters skip films, upset fans

Remember to press play… then put it on MUTE?

That’s the loophole that certain Oscar voters revealed after the Academy announced that members must now watch all films nominated in each category.

Keep ReadingShow less
Ilona Maher
Julian Finney/Getty Images

Olympian Ilona Maher Shows Off Bikini With Inspiring Message—And Fans Are Applauding

Even incredibly powerful Olympic rugby star Ilona Maher sometimes worries about her body size and shape, but she continues to advocate for body positivity and self-defined femininity and beauty.

Maher, a U.S. Women's National Rugby Team Olympic Bronze Medalist, was featured on the digital cover of the Sept. 2024 Sports Illustrated swimsuit issue.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert De Niro
Cindy Ord/Getty Images for SiriusXM

Robert De Niro's Daughter Publicly Comes Out As Trans In Powerful New Interview

Airyn De Niro, 29, daughter of actor Robert De Niro, has publicly come out as a trans woman in a new interview with Them.

Though parts of her journey have been previously reported, Airyn says this is the first time she’s truly felt “seen.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Howard Lutnick
MSNBC

Commerce Secretary Ripped For His Dystopian Vision Of Generations Of Families Working At U.S. Factories

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump's Commerce Secretary, Howard Lutnick, spoke on MSNBC about the Trump administration's version of the American dream.

It doesn't involve universal healthcare, a living wage, and access to food and housing.

Keep ReadingShow less
Pete Hegseth
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

Hegseth Gets Hit With Awkward Fact-Check After Bragging About Ending 'Woke' Program

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth was swiftly fact-checked after he claimed in a post on X that he'd ended the "woke" Women, Peace & Security (WPS) program because it was an initiative created by the Biden administration.

For the political right, "wokeness" or "wokeism" generally refers to a left-leaning perspective that acknowledges the widespread existence of racism, sexism, and other forms of discrimination in American society.

Keep ReadingShow less