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Virgin Galactic sees demand for space travel surge


Virgin Galactic's SpaceshipTwo takes off for a suborbital test flightImage copyright
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Virgin Galactic has said it will release more tickets for flights into space amid surging demand.

Sir Richard Branson’s firm, which completed its first sub-orbital test flight in 2018, said it had received almost 8,000 registrations of interest for future commercial flights.

That is more than double the amount it recorded at the end of September 2019.

The firm has so far sold 600 tickets for its inaugural flight, scheduled for later this year.

The news comes as Virgin Galactic’s latest company results show a net loss of $73m for the last quarter.

Currently, the California-based space venture charges customers a deposit of $1,000 to register their interest for future flights. That puts them on a waiting list for when more seats become available.

Virgin Galactic said prices and timing for its next flight were not available yet. Tickets for its inaugural flight retailed at $250,000 apiece.

Those to have already purchased tickets include celebrities Justin Bieber and Leonardo DiCaprio. Sir Richard Branson has said he will be on the first trip.

“We have been greatly encouraged by the ongoing and increasing demand seen from around the world for personal spaceflight,” said Stephen Attenborough, Virgin Galactic’s commercial director. Virgin Galactic saw its losses widen in the three months to December, compared with a $46m loss in the same period in 2018.

Virgin Galactic is the only publicly-listed space tourism group, having floated on the New York stock exchange last October.

The company, along with Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin, have all been in a race to send tourists into orbit.



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