Within four minutes of the open of Saturday's live phone
auction, bids reached beyond $20 million. The bidding closed
seven minutes after the auction began. The identity of the
winner - presumably an ultra-wealthy space aficionado - was not
immediately disclosed.
The July 20 launch of Blue Origin's New Shepard booster from
West Texas would be a landmark moment as U.S. firms strive
toward a new era of private commercial space travel.
Blue Origin's founder and Amazon.com Inc executive Bezos, the
world's wealthiest man and a lifelong space enthusiast, has been
racing against fellow aspiring billionaire aeronauts Richard
Branson and Elon Musk to be the first of the three to travel
beyond Earth's atmosphere.
"To see the earth from space, changes you. It changes your
relationship with this planet, with humanity," Bezos said in a
video before the final bidding took place, adding that his
brother Mark will join him on the trip.
As the month-long bidding process leading up to the live auction
closed on Thursday, the winning figure stood at $4.8 million,
fueled by entries from more than 6,000 people from at least 143
countries, Blue Origin said.
"Putting the world's richest man and one of the most recognized
figures in business into space is a massive advertisement for
space as a domain for exploration, industrialization and
investment," Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas told clients
earlier this month.
While the funds raised from the event are earmarked for charity,
Blue Origin is hoping to galvanize enthusiasm for its nascent
suborbital tourism business.
However, Branson, who founded Virgin Galactic Holdings Inc, may
attempt to steal Bezos' thunder by joining a possible test
flight to the edge of space over the July 4 weekend aboard
Virgin's VSS Unity spaceplane, one person familiar with the
matter said.
The race is fueled by optimism that space travel will become
mainstream as nascent technology is proven and costs fall,
fueling what UBS estimates could be a $3 billion annual tourism
market by 2030.
Blue Origin and Virgin Galactic, as well as Musk's SpaceX, have
also discussed using their rockets to link far-flung global
cities. UBS says that long-haul travel market could be worth
more than $20 billion, though several barriers such as
air-safety certification could derail the plans.
Blue Origin has not divulged its pricing strategy for future
trips.
Reuters reported in 2018 that Blue Origin was planning to charge
passengers at least $200,000 for the ride, based on a market
study and other considerations, though its thinking may have
changed.
(Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle and Brendan O'Brien in
Chicago; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien and Chizu Nomiyama)
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