Bezos says he’s creating a space industry with Elon Musk and Richard Branson
‘It’s NOT a competition’: Jeff Bezos says he’s not racing Branson and Musk to space and they’re all working to create a space ‘industry’ with plans for internet satellites, tourist flights and moving pollution away from Earth
- Bezos told Gayle King on Tuesday he is not competing against SpaceX and Virgin Galactic
- He said there was room in space for all of them and that it would become an ‘industry’
- Bezos wants to create reusable, operable capsules and rockets that will allow industries to be moved to space
- He says it’ll save the planet by protecting its fragile environment from pollution
- Virgin boss Richard Branson wants to establish space tourism with flights to the edge of earth’s atmosphere
- Elon Musk wants to colonize Mars and set up broadband internet satellites
- Branson was the first of the three to go to space on his VSS Unity earlier this year
- Musk hasn’t yet made it but SpaceX has sent two teams of astronauts up
Jeff Bezos said on Wednesday he is not competing with SpaceX‘s Elon Musk and Virgin Galactic’s Richard Branson with his spaceflight and instead said they are all contributing to a future space industry that would eventually have ‘thousands’ of companies.
The three billionaires all have varying goals when it comes to their individual space missions.
Richard Branson wants to establish commercial space tourism with his Virgin flights while Bezos says he wants to move all of the harmful, polluting industries on Earth to space to allow them to continue while preserving Earth’s environment.
Musk wants to put broadband satellites in space and also colonize Mars.
The three have different ‘missions’ but the progress of their projects has led many to believe their space race is nothing more than an ego-driven competition between three of the world’s richest men.
Bezos told Gayle King on Tuesday he is not competing against SpaceX and Virgin Galactic or their founders and that all three could exist in space
Bezos, in an interview with CBS This Morning that aired on Wednesday, insisted this wasn’t the case.
‘I promise you it really isn’t [a competition]. It is not a competition. If you want to think about it, there’s one first person in space – his name is Yuri Gagarin and it happened 60 years ago.
‘What we have to do is build a whole industry Gayle, it’s got to be an ecosystem made up of dozens, hundreds, thousands of companies.
‘Just like what you see with the internet today… two kids in a dorm room could start a space company that changes the world.
‘You have to have many companies pulling together.
‘They compete against each other but there can be many winners,’ he told Gayle King.
Branson congratulated Bezos’ Blue Origin team on Twitter on Tuesday after their mission, saying: ‘Well done Blue Origin, Jeff Bezos, Mark, Wally and Oliver.
‘Impressive! Very best to all the crew from me and all the team at Virgin Galactic.’
Branson was the first of the three to go to space on his VSS Unity earlier this year.
Musk hasn’t yet made it but SpaceX has sent two teams of astronauts up.
Virgin Galactic founder Richard Branson went to space in VSS Unity earlier this month. Musk’s SpaceX has sent two crews to space but he has not been on either flight
Bezos also said he doesn’t think people ‘understand’ what he’s trying to achieve and that his flight was not just a billionaire’s joy ride.
‘I don’t think people understand or most people don’t,’ he said.
‘If you think about it, we, humanity, is big now. The earth is small, it’s fragile. It feels big to us but when you get into space and see the atmosphere it’s so thin and fragile-looking.
‘This sounds fantastical but it will happen – we can move all heavy industry, all polluting industry, off of earth and operate it in space. And that can’t happen today it will take many decades.
‘It will be like in the era of the Kitty Hawk, tiny little airplane that can fly 100ft. If you told somebody someday there would be a 787, it would seem impossible.
‘We’ve been to all the planets in the solar system with robotic probes, this is the good one. it’s the only good one and we have to protect it.
‘Mark and I are going to be dead before this job is done, it’s not about us.
‘It’s about what Blue Origin can do, which is build a space vehicle that is so operable, inexpensive and commercial that it becomes the infrastructure the next generation can use to take those big steps.’