SpaceX Group postponed plans to bring tourists to the Moon

The Wall Street Journal on June 4 reported that Space Exploration Technology Group SpaceX will postpone the plan to bring travelers flying around the Moon this year and back this plan until mid-2019.

According to the above report, SpaceX has not yet announced a new timetable for the flight to fly around the Moon, which has been postponed until at least mid-2019 or possibly longer.

The reason for this delay is still unknown, but this is a sign that technical and manufacturing challenges are breaking the plan to bring people to explore the Solar System of the Space X boss.

Picture 1 of SpaceX Group postponed plans to bring tourists to the Moon
The plan to bring tourists around the Moon will be postponed until mid-2019.

Meanwhile, SpaceX spokesman James Gleeson said the group is still planning to bring customers flying around the Moon and this type of trip is receiving increasing interest from customers.

As planned, it will be used (including a Falcon 9 rocket and two auxiliary missiles) and its carrier to bring people into space.

Earlier, in February 2017, SpaceX first announced the time to take people to the Moon when Elon Musk announced on Twitter about the mission expected this year.

If it is planned, this will be the flight to bring people into outer space ever. The United States has not taken astronauts to the Moon since such missions because the Apollo ship of the US Aeronautics and Space Agency (NASA) carried out in the 60s and 70s of the last century.

SpaceX is currently one of the leading companies in space transport and a partner of NASA. SpaceX has long been planning to expand into rocket technology by developing rockets that can be reused after every spacecraft launch.