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Washington: Thrill-seekers looking to blast into space would need to be informed in writing of serious risks – including death – and promise not to sue the government under the first-ever rules for commercial space travel.
The rules issued on Friday by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) mandate training and medical fitness evaluations for crew members, preflight testing and other steps companies must take before getting licenses to carry paying passengers into the beyond.
The rules apply to American companies launching from anywhere in the world, and to foreign companies launching from US soil.
Virgin Galactic, run by British entrepreneur Richard Branson, is aiming to offer out-of-this-world vacations in 2008 for travelers willing to pay $200,000 apiece. Space Adventures Ltd of Vienna, Virginia, is making similar plans, as are other outfits.
The FAA regulations were required under legislation Congress passed two years ago, in the wake of the successful 2004 flights of a privately financed manned rocket over California's Mojave Desert.
For now, the flights are not required to be safe for passengers.
Lawmakers were concerned that safety requirements would hamper innovation in the infant industry, and settled on informed consent for the early years of paid space travel.
The FAA was given the authority to begin regulating for passenger safety in eight years, or if an accident causing serious injury or death happened before then.
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