- Connecticut’s time for energy investment is now – if state leaders get on board
- Two-time USWNT gold medalist Lauren Holiday joins global soccer investment group Mercury/13
- State launches panel to study climate implications of pension system investments
- Elon Musk Accused Of Bullying Republicans To Scrap US-China Investment Safeguards To Protect Tesla’s Interests – Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA)
- US lawmaker kicks off 2025 by disclosing altcoin investment
After Akio Toyoda, CEO and President of Toyota, announced he was stepping down on Thursday, he shared his advice to his successor and his business philosophy.
You are viewing: Toyota exploring orbital rocket development, makes startup investment
Photo by Yoshikazu Tsuno | Gamma-rapho | Getty Images
LAS VEGAS — Toyota Motor is exploring the development and production of orbital rockets, Chairman Akio Toyoda said Monday.
See more : Model captures energy return on global agriculture investment
The automaker, through its “Woven by Toyota” mobility company, is investing 7 billion Japanese yen ($44.4 million) into Interstellar Technologies Inc., a Japanese private spaceflight company developing launch vehicles for satellites.
Toyoda, former CEO and scion of the automaker, said there shouldn’t only be “one car company” — referring to Tesla, whose CEO Elon Musk also leads SpaceX — working on the development of such technologies.
“We are exploring rockets too, because the future of mobility shouldn’t be limited to just earth or just one car company, for that matter,” Toyoda said during a press conference for the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
Founded in 2013, Interstellar Technologies has performed seven launches of its small suborbital MOMO rockets, which reached space for the first time in 2019. The startup has yet to deploy a satellite in orbit, with plans to develop the larger ZERO and DECA line of rockets for delivering spacecraft.
Toyota said the company expects to leverage its experience with the mass production of vehicles for the production of rockets with Interstellar Technologies.
In the Japanese launch market, Toyota is taking on Mitsubishi, whose subsidiary Mitsubishi Heavy Industries has developed and launched the H3 series of rockets for JAXA, the country’s space agency. Mitsubishi’s H3 rocket, which debuted several years behind schedule, was intended to be priced competitively with SpaceX’s Falcon 9 rockets, which dominate the current global launch market.
Woven City
Toyota on Monday also announced completion of the first phase of Woven City, including housing for residents and inventors whom the automaker is inviting to come to the location.
Woven by Toyota was announced five years ago by Toyoda at CES as a “prototype city of the future,” located on a 175-acre site at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan to test and develop new emerging technologies such as autonomous vehicles.
The chairman said the mission of Woven City isn’t necessarily to make money, but to be a test course and experimental proving ground for future technologies.
Source: https://magnacumlaude.store
Category: News