nasa views from the international spacestation

Photo: Pixabay

Nasa’s ISS tourism: How much it’ll cost and the views you might see [photos]

Nasa announced on Friday that it will open the International Space Station to business ventures and tourism from 2020. Here’s what you can expect from the views – and the price.

nasa views from the international spacestation

Photo: Pixabay

Nasa has announced that it will open the International Space Station to business ventures including space tourism. The move seeks to financially disengage from the orbiting research lab.

“Nasa is opening the International Space Station to commercial opportunities and marketing these opportunities as we’ve never done before,” NASA chief financial officer Jeff DeWit said in New York.

What it will cost to visit space

Stays will be priced at $35 000 a night  and there will be up to two short private astronaut missions per year, according to Robyn Gatens, deputy director of the ISS.

The missions will be for stays of up to 30 days. As many as a dozen private astronauts could visit the ISS per year, Nasa said.

How Nasa’s space tourism will work

These travellers would be ferried to the orbiter exclusively by the two companies currently developing transport vehicles for Nasa: SpaceX, with its Crew Dragon capsule, and Boeing, which is building one called Starliner.

These companies would choose the clients and bill for the trip to the ISS, which will be the most expensive part of the adventure: around $58 million for a round trip ticket.

That is the average rate the companies will bill Nasa for taking the space adventurers up to the ISS.

But the tourists will also pay Nasa for their stay in space, for food, water and use of the life support system on the orbiter.

That will run about $35 000 per night per astronaut, said DeWit.

The space station does not belong to Nasa. It was built along with Russia starting in 1998, and other countries participate in the mission and send up astronauts.

But the US has paid for and controls most of the modules that make up the orbiter.

The new space tourists to the ISS will not be the first: US businessman Dennis Tito had that honour in 2001. He paid Russia around $20 million for the trip.

Views from the ISS in pictures

nasa views from the international spacestation
Photo: Pixabay
nasa views from the international spacestation
The aurora australis, also known as the “southern lights,” is pictured as the International Space Station orbited 264 miles above the Indian Ocean south of the Australian island state of Tasmania. Photo: Nasa
nasa views from the international spacestation
Photo: Pixabay
nasa views from the international spacestation
This photograph, snapped by an astronaut aboard the International Space Station in Decemeber 2013, shows a white flash of lightning amidst the yellow city lights of Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. Photo: Nasa
nasa views from the international spacestation
Sarychev Peak Volcano eruption, Kuril Islands, is featured in this image photographed by an Expedition 20 crew member on the International Space Station. Photo: Nasa
nasa views from the international spacestation
With hardware from the Earth-orbiting International Space Station appearing in the near foreground, a night time European panorama reveals city lights from Belgium and the Netherlands at bottom center, the British Isles partially obscured by solar array panels at left, the North Sea at left center, and Scandinavia at right center beneath the end effector of the Space Station Remote Manipulator System or Canadarm2. Photo: Nasa
nasa views from the international spacestation
This view taken by an Expedition 16 crewmember onboard the International Space Station shows the island of Bermuda. Photo: Nasa
nasa views from the international spacestation
Backdropped by Earth’s horizon and the blackness of space, a full moon is photographed by an Expedition 29 crew member on the International Space Station. Photo: Nasa