Google co-founder books seat to rocket into outer space

Source: Agencies  |   2008-6-12  |     ONLINE EDITION


This photo provided by Image Box Inc. shows Google co-founder Sergey Brin, center, as he trains in zero gravity in airspace above northern California, Feb. 2, 2008. Space Adventures, the company that sends wealthy tourists to the International Space Station, said yesterday, that Brin has paid US$5 million to reserve a seat on a future flight. Eric Anderson, President and CEO of Space Adventures is pictured lower right.

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A COMPANY that sends wealthy tourists into space aboard Russian rockets announced yesterday that it has a new client, Google co-founder Sergey Brin, and a new plan for the first entirely private flight to the international space station.

Space Adventures Ltd. said Brin, a native of Moscow, had paid US$5 million to reserve a seat on a future flight.

Just where and when the 35-year-old billionaire might fly is still up in the air. Since 2001, the company has sent five tourists to the space station, but it has been dreaming about other destinations, including a swing around the far side of the moon.

Brin didn't appear at the company's news conference at the Explorer's Club in Manhattan, but he said in a statement that he considered his deposit an investment in the company and suggested he hadn't decided whether to exercise his option to fly.

"I am a big believer in the exploration and commercial development of the space frontier and am looking forward to the possibility of going into space," the statement said.

Google Inc. chief executive Eric Schmidt declined to comment, calling it a personal matter.

Space Adventures also announced Wednesday that it had reached an agreement to preserve its partnership with Russia, which had been indicating lately that its days in the space tourism business were numbered.

On each of its five previous missions, the Virginia-based company had tagged along aboard flights already scheduled by the Russians, who were willing to sell spare seats to raise cash.

Top Russian space officials, however, had expressed doubt that they could continue to offer seats, citing increased demand for trips to the space station.

The station's crew is expected to increase from three to six astronauts in 2009, and once NASA retires the space shuttle in 2010 it will also be relying on Russia to get US astronauts into space.


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