European crew poised for private mission to International Space Station

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket with its Crew Dragon capsule sits at launch pad LC-39A at the Kennedy Space Center ahead of the Axiom Mission Three at Cape Canaveral, Florida, on January 17, 2024. The AX-3 private spaceflight to the International Space Station will be the first orbital spaceflight mission where all crew members have European citizenship. It will also mark the first flight for an astronaut from Turkey, Alper Gezeravci. (Photo by Gregg Newton / AFP)

An all-European crew including Turkey’s first astronaut are poised to blast off to the International Space Station in a mission with Axiom Space, as countries hungry for a taste of space turn increasingly to the private sector.

The launch, Axiom’s third, is scheduled to see the four-member crew lift off in a SpaceX Crew Dragon capsule fixed to the top of a Falcon 9 rocket at 4:49 pm local time (2111 GMT) on Thursday from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

“It marks a new era of opportunity for countries to join the international space community” and “shifts the paradigm of how space agencies access LEO (low Earth orbit), for exploration and research in microgravity,” Axiom Space’s chief of mission integration and operations Derek Hassmann said of Axiom Mission 3 (Ax-3).

It is the first ISS mission for Axiom where all three of the paid seats have been bought by national agencies, rather than by wealthy individuals.

Turkish pilot and air force colonel Alper Gezeravci is joined by Marcus Wandt from Sweden, who will be the second Swede in space, and Walter Villadei, an Italian air force colonel who has previously flown to the edge of space on a Virgin Galactic spaceplane.

The crew are led by Axiom’s Chief Astronaut Michael Lopez-Alegria, a Spanish and US citizen and former NASA astronaut.

The exact costs haven’t been disclosed, but in 2018 when the company first announced the program, which involves chartering SpaceX hardware and paying NASA for services, it set a price tag of $55 million per seat.

More recently, Hungary was reported by spacenews.com to be planning a $100 million deal with Axiom for a future mission involving one astronaut.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has displayed a keen interest in the mission, presenting Gezeravci to the Turkish public in the runup to his re-election last year, and calling the 21-year air force veteran a “heroic Turkish pilot.”

“We see it as a new symbol of the growing, stronger and assertive Turkey,” Erdogan said about the space mission on Tuesday.

Sweden’s Marcus Wandt, meanwhile, applied for the European Space Agency (ESA) astronaut class of 2022 but was made a reserve. Axiom-3 therefore allows Sweden to put its second national in space.

The Axiom-3 team will join seven crew currently aboard the ISS — from Japan, Denmark, the United States and Russia — and carry out 30 experiments, learning more about the impact of microgravity on the human body, advancing industrial processes and more.

Axiom-3 was previously scheduled to launch on Wednesday, but SpaceX posted on X it was holding another day to “complete pre-launch checkouts and data analysis on the vehicle.”

On Tuesday Benji Reed, the senior director of human spaceflight at SpaceX, said engineering teams had discovered certain technical issues in the way the Dragon capsule’s landing parachutes deployed, and how it was attached to the Falcon 9 rocket, but said both problems had been resolved.