"Starship is an amazing machine."

Starship Transporter

During a conference hosted by MIT's Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics, SpaceX COO and president Gwynne Shotwell reiterated the space company's desires to get its Mars-bound spacecraft Starship off the ground.

"Starship is an amazing machine," she said, as quoted by SpaceNews.

"I could not be more excited about a vehicle than I am about Starship," she added. "That is the vehicle that will take people in great numbers to the Moon, to Mars."

Since December 2020, SpaceX has flown four full-scale prototypes of the massive, 165-foot spacecraft so far at its test facilities in South Texas. But all four ended up exploding upon landing — or shortly before or afterward — after reaching an altitude of roughly ten kilometers.

Large Numbers of People

Despite the explosions, Shotwell remains optimistic.

"I believe we will be flying large numbers of people on Starship in five years," she said, referring to Starship's other main purpose: flying passengers from one side of Earth to the other as part of a massive long-haul transportation network, a concept SpaceX first revealed during a 2017 announcement.

The COO even promised that Starship will be ready to send the first-ever astronauts to Mars "before 2030," even earlier than previously expected. "It might end up taking that long, but I hope not."

Shotwell argued that the point-to-point transportation flights could give SpaceX enough insights to make it to the Red Planet.

"You’re flying enough where you hopefully have enough knowledge of the system and knowledge of risk that you can definitely start the journey to Mars within the next five years," she said.

It's easy to throw out numbers when it comes to SpaceX's characteristically aggressive timelines, of course. Actually sticking to them is an entirely different challenge.

And Shotwell is aware of that, pointing out at the event that the company's timelines are "aspirational. But you have to aim high."

READ MORE: SpaceX adds to latest funding round [SpaceNews]

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