<blockquote><font class="small">In reply to:</font><hr /><p>Only if tourism gives money for space development(*), then I would fund it

<p><hr /></p></p></blockquote><br /><br />Thats the thing. "Tourism" has built in incentives for companies to offer more for less money. That means, that they will invest in creating better, safer , cheaper and more frequent ways of getting up there. Normal market forces at work. <br /><br />Once the price per flight becomes low enough, all sorts of different groups can afford it for different purposes ( company research groups, universities ) that will want the flights, but with their unique capabilities, which will mean that companies will have to invest more to serve them better, and if one company doesnt step in to serve that market, another will because they see untapped opportunitiy.. and so on, an on.<br /><br />The whole idea of promoting space tourism is for the purpose of getting started on that development spiral, where new market, new types of demand and new suppliers can emerge. Currently we just sort of see demand for flying rich people up there, once the development starts to spiral, at new price points new services will appear.<br /><br />Government role in here is to help speeding up that spiral in the beginning, and that exactly what ESA tries here.