Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rocket plans meet pushback in California

Coastal Commission hears concerns from residents and environmen­talists

- PHIL DIEHL

Plans by SpaceX and other companies to boost the number of rocket launches sometimes seen streaking across San Diego County’s skies have prompted the California Coastal Commission to question the environmen­tal effects.

Residents near Vandenberg Space Force Base, on the state’s Central Coast, say the launches shake their homes and rattle their nerves. People don’t know when to expect them because the lift-off time varies and can be delayed by weather conditions.

“I find it difficult to believe that there are no impacts on (wildlife) species due to SpaceX launches,” said Carpinteri­a resident Rebecca Stebbins in an April 5 letter to the Coastal Commission.

“I, along with thousands of other residents of the South Coast, am significan­tly impacted with each launch, including being woken up from a deep sleep on occasion, while my dogs are terrified, my house shakes, and the sonic booms are felt physically, with a deep shock.”

Conservati­onists say that the noise disturbs native wildlife such as red-legged frogs, the western snowy plover, seals and sea lions, and that it interferes with commercial and recreation­al fishing. Nearby public beaches and fishing grounds are often closed during the launches.

“The launches are extremely loud and destructiv­e,” said Mandy Sackett in San Diego, senior California policy coordinato­r for the Surfrider Foundation.

“Sound impacts are grossly underestim­ated,” Sackett said, and she urged the Coastal Commission to “pump the brakes” on the increase.

Another downside are the latex weather balloons released before every flight to check atmospheri­c conditions. The balloons carry batteries and electronic­s that reach the stratosphe­re and then burst from the pressure before falling back to earth or into the ocean, where the equipment sinks with little chance of being recovered.

As many as 30 balloons were released before each launch until recently, a Vandenberg official said. A launch now needs as few as 10, and the number is decreasing as technology improves.

Space companies pay mitigation fees of $10 for each pound of unrecovera­ble debris they create, and the money goes into a fund for the collection of lost fishing gear such as monofilame­nt line and nets. But commission­ers, at their meeting Wednesday in Long Beach, said that amount may be insufficie­nt.

“A battery is hazardous waste,” said Commission­er Kristina Kunkel. “It’s not comparable to fishing gear.”

Air quality may be the first concern of anyone who has seen the rocket’s long trail of vapor, yet the reported emissions are well below applicable state and federal standards. The fuel is rocket-grade kerosene combined with liquid oxygen. When it burns, it produces a negligible amount of soot and nitrogen oxide in the exhaust.

The U.S. Space Force and SpaceX, owned by electric-car magnate Elon Musk, have asked the Coastal Commission to approve an increase to as many as 36 launches a year at Vandenberg. The SpaceX launches averaged six annually over the past five years, although they have been increasing steadily, reaching a total of 19 in 2022 and 28 in 2023.

The company has been ramping up launches as it builds a network of nearly 42,000 Starlink satellites to provide worldwide directto-cell internet service. Each Falcon 9 rocket carries up to 22 satellites.

The Coastal Commission reached no decision on the request Wednesday. Instead, the commission­ers voted to postpone the matter so staffers can look further into the cumulative effects of the launches and return with more informatio­n in a month or longer.

Other private companies and federal agencies also launch rockets at Vandenberg. Last year, there were 37 launches in all, said Space Force Col. Bryan Titus, operations vice commander at the base.

The launches are allowed based on the Coastal Commission’s previous determinat­ion that the environmen­tal effects of the events are relatively insignific­ant. Also, there are questions about whether the state agency can regulate actions by the federal government that Titus said are vital to national security.

“All launches support the Defense Department and our allies,” Titus said.

About 25% of all SpaceX rockets include a Defense Department payload, he said. The United States also benefits from the company’s Starlink system of satellites.

“Starlink has been absolutely critical in the situation in Ukraine,” he said.

Landings of the rocket’s reusable first stage also will increase under the SpaceX plan, another concern for Central Coast residents.

While the launch of the rocket creates a thunderous roar, it does not create a sonic boom, Titus said. Only the return of the first stage, less than 10 minutes after liftoff, creates a sonic boom that can be heard from 80 miles away or farther, depending on atmospheri­c conditions.

The rocket stage can return to Vandenberg, or, if that’s too far, it can land on a floating platform at sea.

Some of the commission­ers questioned the need for so many launches, especially when most of the profits go to private companies such as SpaceX and Firefly Aerospace, a Texas-based aerospace company.

Some of the commission­ers said they would prefer to see statistics for all the launches, including those by NASA, the Defense Department and private companies. They also noted that no one representi­ng SpaceX was present at the meeting.

“I am concerned about the piecemeali­ng of this,” said Commission­er Ann Notthoff. “We can’t really assess what this exponentia­l growth is. We have to get a handle on that.”

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