SpaceX targets 2018 for first Mars mission
[CAPE CANAVERAL] SpaceX plans to send an unmanned Dragon spacecraft to Mars as early as 2018, the company said on Wednesday, a first step in achieving founder Elon Musk's goal to fly people to another planet.
The program, known as Red Dragon, is intended to develop the technologies needed for human transportation to Mars, a long-term goal for Mr Musk's privately held Space Exploration Technologies, as well as the US space agency NASA.
"Dragon 2 is designed to be able to land anywhere in the solar system," Mr Musk posted on Twitter.
"Red Dragon Mars mission is the first test flight."
The announcement marks the first time SpaceX has targeted a date for its unmanned mission to Mars, company spokeswoman Emily Shanklin wrote in an email to Reuters.
The company said it will provide details of its Mars program at the International Astronautical Congress in September.
Mr Musk started SpaceX, as the company is known, in 2002 with the goal of slashing launch costs to make Mars travel affordable.
SpaceX intends to debut its Mars rocket, a heavy-lift version of the Falcon 9 booster currently flying, before the end of the year.
REUTERS
BT is now on Telegram!
For daily updates on weekdays and specially selected content for the weekend. Subscribe to t.me/BizTimes
Technology
Meta’s results are best viewed through rose-tinted AI glasses
'Harvesting data': Latin American AI startups transform farming
After long peace, Big Tech faces US antitrust reckoning
Tech’s cash crunch sees creditors turn ‘violent’ with one another
Tech millionaires chase billionaire tax shields with ‘swap fund’
Elon Musk’s Starlink profits are more elusive than investors think