Teenager to fly with Bezos in inaugural space tourism flight
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[July 16, 2021]
By Eric M. Johnson
(Reuters) - An 18-year-old physics student
whose father heads an investment management firm is set to take the
place of a person who put up $28 million in an auction to take part in
the inaugural space tourism flight for billionaire Jeff Bezos' Blue
Origin company.
Blue Origin said on Thursday Oliver Daemen will join the four-member
all-civilian crew for Tuesday's scheduled flight after the auction
winner, whose name had not been made public, dropped out due to
unspecified "scheduling conflicts." Daemen becomes the company's first
paying customer.
His addition means that the flight is set to include the oldest person
ever to go to space - 82-year-old trailblazing female aviator Wally Funk
- and the youngest, Daemen, according to Blue Origin. Joining them for
Blue Origin's suborbital launch will be Bezos and his brother Mark Bezos.
Daemen is working to obtain his pilot's license and is set to attend the
University of Utrecht in the Netherlands to study physics and innovation
management in September, Blue Origin said. His father is Somerset
Capital Partners CEO and founder Joes Daemen.
The elder Daemen "paid for the seat and chose to fly Oliver," Blue
Origin said. The company declined to say how much was paid.
"Flying on New Shepard will fulfill a lifelong dream for Oliver, who has
been fascinated by space, the Moon, and rockets since he was four," the
company said in a news release.
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An interior view of the Blue Origin Crew Capsule mockup at the 33rd
Space Symposium in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States April
5, 2017. REUTERS/Isaiah J. Downing/File Photo
Bezos has been locked in a race with billionaire
rivals Richard Branson and Elon Musk as they seek to usher in a new
era of commercial space travel in a tourism market that Swiss bank
UBS estimates could be worth $3 billion annually in a decade.
New Shepard is a 60-foot-tall (18.3-meters-tall) and fully
autonomous rocket-and-capsule combo that cannot be piloted from
inside the spacecraft. The launch is set for a site in West Texas.
Branson, the British billionaire businessman, was aboard his company
Virgin Galactic's rocket plane for its pioneering suborbital flight
from New Mexico on Sunday.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Will Dunham)
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