(WNAM Monitoring): Space travel and tourism will become more accessible as more companies — particularly those in the aviation industry — will offer services to bring people on sub-orbital flights.
This was the assessment made by a senior high official of Dubai-based carrier Emirates during a one-off special flight on Tuesday, celebrating the UAE’s space initiatives ahead of its 52nd National Day, and Sultan AlNeyadi’s successful return from a six-month mission aboard the International Space Station (ISS), where he conducted not only numerous scientific research, but also recorded the first spacewalk for the Arab world.
On board an A380 during flight EK2641, Adel Al Redha, Emirates Chief Operating Officer, said: “The more we explore to know more about space, the more people would like to take that journey to space.”
Space tourism, also called personal spaceflight or commercial human spaceflight, is flying at an altitude higher than 100 km above sea level that is called the Kármán line, or the conventional boundary between Earth’s atmosphere and outer space. At that altitude, passengers can experience weightlessness or near-zero gravity.
Al Redha did not categorically reply to a direct question if Emirates would venture into space tourism industry or is open to collaborate with current companies offering sub-orbital flights, but he underlined: “I would not be surprised in the near future to hear airline companies launching services for space travel.”
According to some market research, the global space tourism industry is expected to grow from $851.7 million in 2024 to $5.19 billion by 2034.