Win a £1500 Raymond Weil watch

When someone looks you in the eye and tells you he’s planning a supersonic electric plane and a retirement community on Mars, it can be hard to take him seriously.
It gets a little easier when you realise he is worth more than $325m (£223m), owns the world’s most successful electric sports car company, has put a rocket into orbit and was hired by Nasa last month to help it keep the International Space Station supplied.
Elon Musk may have a name redolent of a Bond villain, but he is the .poster child of the web generation, a Bill Gates for the 21st century. Like Gates, Musk made his first fortune in com.puting, designing the PayPal online payment system that now handles about 10% of global e-commerce. But where Gates stuck with software, Musk’s ambitions are altogether more, well, out of this world.
I’m talking to Musk at the Los Angeles headquarters — No1, Rocket Road, naturally — of his company Space Exploration Technologies Corporation, universally known as SpaceX. With a Cylon (an alien robot from the TV show Battle.star Galactica) standing guard over the factory floor and geeks scooting around on bikes, SpaceX feels more like a web start-up than a company competing with the world’s superpowers for extra-terrestrial domination.
In an open-plan office just feet from rocket scientists designing his next generation of launch vehicles, Musk is frank about his long-term aims: “We are already the most competitive launch company in the world. My goal is to make it affordable enough and reliable enough to move life from Earth to other planets.”
The 37-year-old is off to a flying start. In September, just six years after the company’s formation and following three spectacular failed attempts, SpaceX became the first private company to shoot a liquid-fuelled rocket, the Falcon 1, into orbit.
SpaceX’s achievement is all the more impressive because the young company designed the vehicle from scratch with just a few hundred employees. “I’m very proud of everyone,” says Musk. “Our rockets have a unique structural design and we’re the first to use a new kind of injector on the engine.”
Just weeks after the first flight of Falcon 1, SpaceX reached its next milestone: a test-firing of the larger Falcon 9 spacecraft in Texas. While the Falcon 1 will earn SpaceX money lobbing satellites into orbit, the Falcon 9 is the vehicle for Musk’s interplanetary dreams.
This nine-engined multi-stage monster is 180ft long and can generate more than a million pounds of thrust. Its Dragon capsule will carry either five tons of cargo or a crew of up to seven astronauts. If the remaining tests go as smoothly, Falcon 9 will be lifting off from Cape Canaveral early this year — and could be in service with Nasa just a year later.
It couldn’t come a moment too soon. With the space shuttle due to retire next year and Nasa’s next generation launch vehicle, Ares, due no earlier than 2014, the Falcon 9 is desperately needed to ferry astronauts to the International Space Station. In December Nasa announced that SpaceX had won $3.5billion in contracts to begin delivering cargo to the station by next year.
“There are science modules on the space station that can’t be used because the three people currently on board just spend all their time repairing stuff,” says Musk. “If you can get six people up there, you can start to do real science. And that’s what our system will enable, because Dragon can carry seven people to Soyuz’s three. It’s like a roomy SUV.”
That’s not to say that SpaceX is content merely to be Nasa’s chauffeur. “Nasa will continue to be our biggest customer for a while but, with a recession looming, I think we’re going to see some limits on its funding,” says Musk.
“[Barack] Obama’s position on commercial space flight is very strong, even stronger than \[George\] Bush’s. We’re not going to see governments stop doing space altogether but private companies will account for the majority of space activity, probably within 10 years.”
Musk has a history of playing rough and tumble with established businesses, and enthuses about his colleagues at PayPal. “We were competing against banks and eBay’s own payment service. That’s very difficult, it’s like fighting a land war in Asia. It really was a very talented team.” That team went on to help found some of today’s biggest web businesses, including YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn and Yelp. So will SpaceX spawn a similar industry of high-tech space start-ups?
Musk shakes his head emphatically. “SpaceX will be the industry. We are continuing to grow. We will be at least 30-50%
larger by the end of next year — and we’d be growing faster still if it wasn’t for the economy.”
He’s also keen to distance himself from Virgin Galactic, the space tourism venture of fellow tycoon Sir Richard Branson. “Branson has shown that sub-orbital space flight is very much in demand. But SpaceX launches are more than an order of magnitude more difficult — getting to orbit takes about 70 times the energy of a sub-orbital tourist flight.”
Musk has his own plans for humanity’s future beyond the atmosphere. “We’re looking at the commercialisation of space and the realisation of a permanent presence up there,” he says with a gleam in his eye.
“If we could lower the cost of moving to Mars below a certain threshold, say $2m, I could see that being a huge business. It’s not like a lot of people would have to go, just 10,000-20,000 people out of the six billion people on Earth. People could save up all their lives and instead of buying a big house — or moving to Florida — they could go to Mars.”
At same time, though,There’s a tension, however, between Musk’s utopian road map to space and his commonsense business nous. For instance, he’s dismissive of calls for orbiting power .stations or for mining asteroids.
“I run my own solar power company Solar CityCities, which installs domestic solar panels] so if anyone should be.lieve in solar power from space, I should. If I thought there was even a glimmer of hope, I would be interested. But I don’t. And I don’t believe there will ever be a scenario where it’s cheaper to go up and get minerals from space than it is to get the stuff from the Earth’s crust.”
If Musk’s future is in the stars, there is still plenty to keep him down to earth today. Tesla Motors, his electric sports car company, recently applied for government funding and warned that without it, the development of its Model S saloon would have to be delayed. “Rumours of the demise of Tesla have been greatly exaggerated,” says Musk. “When a company has been a golden child for so long, there’s a tendency to want to tear it down. We’ve actually got twice as much money as we need to reach profitability.”
The company is ramping up production of its 125mph Lotus Elise-inspired Roadster while planning the launch of the Model S at $60,000 (£41,000). I wonder how making the luxury Roadster fits with Musk’s ideals of moving to a sustainable energy economy. “If we could have done a low-cost car right off the bat, we would have made that car,” he says.
“It’s not out of a feeling that there are insufficient sports cars in the world that we have done this. Anything new is expensive. Now we could have made a $109,000 sports car or we could have made a $90,000 Honda Civic. Which do you think would have sold better?”
The Roadster’s technology is about to trickle down to (very slightly) cheaper cars. Tesla has signed a deal with a big car company — strongly rumoured to be Daimler — to supply it with battery packs and chargers for a “very large” test fleet of cars, due to reach showrooms later this year.
Musk famously owns (and still drives) the first Roadster that came off the production line. Will he also be on the first manned flight of the Falcon 9? The tycoon laughs. “I used to take a lot of personal risks but at this stage, with five kids and three companies, I’m risking more than just myself. I would like to go into space but I’ll wait until the time is right.”
What’s next for the high-tech entrepreneur? Musk thinks for a moment before revealing his plans to combine his aeronautical and sustainable energy expertise. “I do have this idea for an airplane,” he confesses, “an electric supersonic jet that takes off and lands vertically. That would be really cool.”
Cooler than an affordable electric sports car? Cooler than your own space rocket and Martian colony? Maybe, but only just.
The latest in men's fashion from our sister site:
Industry sectors news at a glance. Interactive heatmap, video and podcast
Everything the Business Traveller needs to know to make a better trip
Get ready for the winter sports season, with our resort guides and snow reports
We are backing British business, what is the confidence of the nation and what businesses are succeeding?
Growing demand for energy, oil that is harder to reach and the rise of carbon dioxide emissions. We examine the energy challenge
With rail travel in Europe on the rise, we review the benefits of travelling by train
In this special section we explore new food trends to help improve your dinner party and impress guests
Enjoy further reading from Travel to Fashion, Business to Sport, discover more
Shortcuts to help you find sections and articles
1998
£47,955
2004
£56,950
Essex
Check your free Experian credit report before applying
Car Insurance
£100,000
Barnardos
UK
£123,460 pa
The Law Commission
London
Hampshire County Council
Competitive + bonus + benefits
Manchester United
Central London
Moments from Battersea Park.
For sale with Winkworth
Find out about shared ownership.
See your free Experian credit report beforehand
Includes flights, accommodation with room upgrades, transfers city tours in Hong Kong and Bangkok.
PremierHolidays.co.uk
For your ultimate tailor-made ski holiday, click here
Get covered on your travels with a superb range of policies at great prices. Visit InsureandGo.com
Choose from the beautiful landscape and tranquil beaches of Oahu, Kauai, Maui & Big Island.
Contact our advertising team for advertising and sponsorship in Times Online, The Times and The Sunday Times, or place your advertisement.
Times Online Services: Dating | Jobs | Property Search | Used Cars | Holidays | Births, Marriages, Deaths | Subscriptions | E-paper
News International associated websites: Globrix Property Search | Milkround
Copyright 2009 Times Newspapers Ltd.
This service is provided on Times Newspapers' standard Terms and Conditions. Please read our Privacy Policy.To inquire about a licence to reproduce material from Times Online, The Times or The Sunday Times, click here.This website is published by a member of the News International Group. News International Limited, 1 Virginia St, London E98 1XY, is the holding company for the News International group and is registered in England No 81701. VAT number GB 243 8054 69.