<span>Coffee roasting is often described as an art, but rarely a science, let alone rocket science. That is something Dubai entrepreneur Hatem Alkhafaji and his</span><span> business partner, Anders Cavallini, who lives in Los Angeles, have set out to change. </span> <span>The pair are working on the Space Roasting Capsule</span><span>, an ambitious project that </span><span>involves launching coffee beans </span><span>into space, in a bid to produce the perfect roast</span><span>. </span> <span>Having met while studying for a master's in </span><span>space </span><span>science at the International Space University in Strasbourg</span><span>, the pair bonded over a mutual appreciation for all things out of this world</span><span>, and more specifically, as a way of getting others excited about the cosmos.</span> <span></span><span>And the duo have chosen one, perhaps slightly abstract, staple of every</span><span>day life to help further that mission: the humble cup of coffee. </span> <span>Cue, the Space Roasting Capsule </span><span>– which is </span><span>far from humble, actually. </span> In short<span style="font-size:18px">, a capsule will be shot into space</span><span style="font-size:18px"> and the heat of </span><span style="font-size:18px">its re-entry into the Earth's atmosphere </span><span style="font-size:18px">will roast the beans as they float in a pressurised tank in a zero-gravity environment. </span><span style="font-size:18px">That process will produc</span><span style="font-size:18px">e</span><span style="font-size:18px"> perfectly roasted beans</span><span style="font-size:18px">, Alkhafaji and Cavallini say. </span><span style="font-size:18px"> </span> <span>However, there</span><span> is one small point to note: when you can eventually </span><span>get your hands on</span><span> the cosmic brew, it will set you back up to Dh1,500 per cup. "It's going to cost around $200 (Dh735) to $400 (Dh</span><span>1,470) per cup," Iraq-born and Sharjah-raised Alkhafaji tells </span><span><em>The National </em></span><span>when we meet him over a cup of Dh28 coffee</span><span> in a Dubai cafe. </span> <span>He acknowledges that it</span><span> is a </span><span>high</span><span> price point</span><span> but, he asks, who wouldn't</span><span> pay that to have one of the first cups of coffee</span><span> made with beans roasted in space? "We know that's super high for the average person, but there are a lot of people who would pay that much – it is basically the price it costs to make, with the margin," he</span><span> says. "Realistically, the early cost of it would be around $200. But then we still want to reduce that, our aim is to bring </span><span>the cost down all the way to</span><span> between $40 (Dh147) </span><span>and $50 (Dh184)." </span> <span>According to the </span><span>pair's website, the capsule is the first of its kind with the capability to roast coffee beans in zero gravity. The</span><span>y have </span><span>patented the technology.</span> <span>So, does Alkhafaji believe Dubai residents will be willing to stump up for the intergalactic roast? Well, he’s confident that at least some people will. </span> <span>"You already have people paying Dh90 for a cup of coffee with a sprinkle of gold on top, right? I've tasted that coffee in the Burj Al Arab and I've tasted it in Emirates Palace, just to know what kind of competitors we have and </span><span>… this tastes much better than that," he</span><span> says, gesturing to the coffee in front of us. </span> <span>The leap from a high-end</span><span> Dh90 coffee to his space-roasted brew is worth it, he assures </span><span>me</span><span>. "If you view this cup of coffee in terms of its taste and complexity, people will appreciate that. People already pay much more for the iPhone than what it's worth, but they're buying complex engineering and quality," Alkhafaji says. </span> <span>"You're paying for people to spend a lot of time to think</span><span> about every little detail. If you don't appreciate that, then you definitely wouldn't pay Dh1,000 now, or even Dh200 later on. But if you appreciate the complexity of it, the long process, the engineering points behind </span><span>the whole thing, then really it's very cheap … </span><span>other </span><span>retailers</span><span> would definitely ask for much more than this." </span> <span>It</span><span> is clear this is a real passion project for Alkhafaji, one that </span><span>he and </span><span>Cavallini are </span><span>funding from their own pockets. </span><br/> <span>"We've had a couple of offers for funding, one in particular from the Luxembourg Space Agency as part of the ESA [European Space Agency] funding, where they could fund a start-up. But we didn't feel that was the right opportunity," Alkhafaji</span><span> says. </span> <span>If all goes according to plan</span><span>, UAE residents will be able to </span><span>sip on</span><span> space-roasted coffee at Space Station Cafe, a cafe/museum hybrid "hopefully in the Museum of the Future"</span><span>. </span><span>Alkhafaji hopes to make it much more than just an atypical coffee shop; he wants it to be more of an inclusive and interactive place</span><span>, where people can see space simulations, models and activations. </span> <span>They intend to open </span><span>Space Station Cafe by </span><span>next year, in line with the launch of their coffee and, incidentally, a year ahead of the UAE's mission to reach Mars by 2021.</span> <span>However, this is n</span><span>ot yet a full-time job for Alkhafaji. As well as developing the Space Roasting Capsule, he is</span><span> an architect at Killa Design</span><span> and has worked on a number of high</span><span>-profile projects, including the Burj Al Arab, Office of the Future, and Museum of the Future, throughout the course of his career. </span> <span>So why is he doing all of this?</span> <span>"I want to give something back to the UAE," Alkhafaji says</span><span>. "I would like to help to inspire people; to inspire the young people here. That's why we want to make this as feasible as possible, as cheap as possible, and as approachable as possible for everyone who lives here."</span>