
From left: Charles Chafer,
President Bill Clinton |
Charles M. Chafer
Chief Executive Officer
Space Services Inc.
Charles M. Chafer is an internationally recognized high
technology entrepreneur and pioneer of the commercial space
age. He is Chief Executive Officer of Space Services Inc.,
the world’s leading provider of public participation
space missions.
Mr. Chafer was a founding partner of Team Encounter, LLC.,
a fully integrated aerospace, entertainment and event marketing
company with a mission to provide a global, mass market
audience with unique and public participation space missions
and events. He made significant advances in solar sail technology,
conducted a series of history-making “Cosmic Calls,”
and pioneered the practice of partnering with multinational
corporations in a series of real space missions.
Mr. Chafer co-founded Celestis, Inc., and led the team
that garnered worldwide notice for the first launch of a
post cremation memorial spaceflight -- carrying the ashes
of several celebrities, space scientists, and enthusiasts
into orbit. He also served as President of the Celestis
Foundation, the non profit affiliate of Celestis, Inc. that
makes cash awards to promising space ventures, organizations,
and to individuals who are contributing to the advance of
space commerce and space development.
Before co-founding Celestis, Mr. Chafer created a satellite-based,
interactive videoconferencing network for telemedicine and
distance learning in Texas and West Virginia combining medical
schools, vocational schools, NASA, the Appalachian Regional
Commission, and state governments.
During the 1980’s, working for former Mercury and
Apollo-Soyuz astronaut Deke Slayton, Mr. Chafer managed
marketing and government relations for Space Services Inc.
of America (SSI). SSI was the first company to successfully
launch a privately funded rocket into outer space (Conestoga
1 – 1982).
Before joining SSI, Mr. Chafer served an appointment to
the faculty of the Georgetown University Graduate School
where he co-authored Space Exploration and the Social
Sciences, a NASA-funded book nominated by the agency
in 1982 for the prestigious Blue Pencil award for the best
US government manuscript.
On February 18, 2004 Mr. Chafer testified before the U.S.
Senate Committee on Commerce, Science & Transportation
at a "field hearing" in Houston. He has also testified
before Congress on commercial space issues, participated
in White House working groups on space policy, is regularly
profiled in international print and visual media, and has
published numerous articles in the field.
He is the recipient of the Interactive Video Association
innovation award in 1990, the 1996 National Space Society
Pioneer Award for Space Business, and the 1997 Space Frontier
Foundation “From Vision to Reality” award for
his commercial space leadership.
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