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New company to offer moon flights, for just $1.5 billion

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But the biggest question of all may be: Where will the company get the money to do it?

Although Golden Spike’s board of directors includes at least one venture capitalist — investor Esther Dyson — the initial amount of money required is sure to be staggering. Stern compared it to the “cost of building a major airport” — about $8 billion.

Indeed, Stern admitted that financing was the “long pole in the tent” — a phrase often used by engineers when referring to a project’s thorniest problem. But he said the company would look to make advance sales to interested countries and parties and leverage that money to get financing. He said it was also exploring the sale of naming rights and merchandising possibilities.

“We’ve already had conversations with some national space agencies, and they have expressed their interest,” said Stern, who would not name the countries other than to say they were in Europe and Asia. China is the only nation actively working today to send an astronaut to the moon.

Stern said there was precedent for international interest in spaceflight, pointing to how the Russians flew astronauts from other countries to its space stations. The U.S. and Russia also have made room for foreign astronauts — and even space tourists — aboard the International Space Station.

In fact, Stern said, “one individual who could be in a position to arrange such a mission has approached us and said very seriously ... that they would like to find a way to be on a lunar expeditionary crew.” He would not name that potential customer.

Howard McCurdy, a space expert at American University, said the idea isn’t as far-fetched as it might seem. Although the financial burden was “certainly a large one,” he said the international market could be ripe for either space agencies or thrill seekers looking to put their mark on history.

“I know you could get some Russians and some Saudi princes with the nerves to take on the odds,” McCurdy said.

The company itself is named after the ceremonial spike driven to celebrate the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad in 1869. Its motto is “Extend your reach.”

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