Richard Branson takes satellite launch
business to Japan with airline ANA
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[June 06, 2019]
By Sam Nussey
TOKYO (Reuters) - Sir Richard Branson's
Virgin Orbit said on Thursday it plans to bring its satellite launch
system to Japan in partnership with airline operator ANA Holdings Inc,
which will provide maintenance and possibly aircraft.
Virgin Orbit's LauncherOne system is undergoing testing with the aim of
launching rockets bearing small satellites into space from a modified
jumbo jet. The company said it will conduct its first orbital test
flight later this year.
Branson's space ventures, however, have a history of delays, with his
space tourism company Virgin Galactic running more than a decade behind
the schedule originally promised by the British billionaire.
Virgin Orbit and ANA Holdings, parent of All Nippon Airways (ANA), in a
joint statement said they will identify a launch site together with
Space Port Japan, an industry-backed body which aims to turn Japan into
a space business hub.
The space venture has already announced launch sites in the United
States, Guam, Britain and Italy.
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Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson speaks during an interview
while attending the Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colorado,
U.S., April 11, 2019. REUTERS/Kelsey Brunner
Japan's space industry spans large scale government-backed rocket
launches by Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Ltd - which launched the
Michibiki satellite navigation system - to Interstellar
Technologies, a startup backed by internet entrepreneur Takafumi
Horie that last month launched its first rocket to reach space.
(Reporting by Sam Nussey; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
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