Guymon Daily Herald

Park Service pushes back against licensing Georgia spaceport

- By RUSS BYNUM Associated Press

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) — The National Park Service is pushing back after a U.S. government report recommende­d approval of a launch pad for commercial rockets on the Georgia coast, saying a chance of explosive misfires over a federally protected island popular with tourists and campers poses an “unacceptab­le risk.”

Camden County in Georgia's coastal, southeast corner has spent nine years and $10 million seeking permission to build what would be the nation's 13th licensed commercial spaceport. The proposed Spaceport Camden took a big step forward in June, when the Federal Aviation Administra­tion issued a final environmen­tal impact study that concluded building the spaceport would be its “preferred alternativ­e.”

Now the Park Service and its parent agency, the U.S. Department of the Interior, are disputing the FAA's conclusion that the spaceport poses minimal risks or adverse impacts to Cumberland Island, a federally protected wilderness. The island, known for wild horses and nesting sea turtles, is managed by the Park Service and draws about 60,000 visitors each year.

In a July 22 letter to the FAA, the Interior Department said the final study on the spaceport's impacts noted that a failed launch could result in “fires, explosions, or releases of propellant­s or other hazardous materials.”

The letter says the FAA failed to look closely at potential risks to Cumberland Island, which lies along the proposed flight path for rockets 5 miles (8 kilometers) east of the launch site.

The letter, signed by Laura Fleming of the Interior Department's Office of Environmen­tal Policy and Compliance, says a spaceport safety briefing the FAA gave in December “provided insufficie­nt informatio­n for our needs.”

“As a Federal land manager charged with the protection of some of the nation's most protected resources, (the National Park Service) has a responsibi­lity to plan and prepare for a worstcase scenario,” Fleming wrote. She added: “We require an in-depth understand­ing of the extent of what a worst-case scenario might include.”

Gary Ingram, the Park Service superinten­dent overseeing Cumberland

Island National Seashore,

provided the letter to The Associated Press after a reporter requested a copy.

“The Department of the Interior has determined that the preferred alternativ­e for proposed Spaceport Camden operations poses an unacceptab­le risk to Cumberland Island National Seashore, based on available informatio­n,” Ingram said in an email Thursday.

An FAA spokesman contacted Friday did not give an immediate comment.

A top local official pushing the proposed Georgia spaceport said such back-and-forth exchanges between agencies are a common part of the licensing process and shouldn't threaten the project.

“The FAA is the subject matter expert on launch vehicle safety," Gary Blount, chairman of the Camden County Board of Commission­ers, said in a statement, "and we believe the FAA and the Department of Interior will develop an acceptable path forward just as they have done in other launch site applicatio­ns.”

Similar concerns about flaming debris from a failed launch sparking fires on the ground have been raised by landowners on neighborin­g Little Cumberland Island, which has about 40 private homes. Both islands have no roads connecting them to the mainland, making it difficult to respond to fires.

The FAA report concluded the Georgia county had submitted an “adequate and appropriat­e” plan for dealing with fires and other emergencie­s that might arise from rocket launches. But the Interior Department letter said there was no documentat­ion to show the Park Service was consulted.

The FAA had planned to issue a final decision on Spaceport Camden's license by the end of July. Now the agency says there will be no decision before September — a delay announced on the FAA's website for the Georgia project on July 23, the day after the Interior Department sent its letter.

The letter said the Park Service is willing to reconsider its position if it receives more informatio­n on potential risks and “a revised proposal that avoids and minimizes potential harm to Department resources.”

Local officials say the county of 55,000 people would get a soaring economic boost by joining the commercial space race, with a private launch pad luring both supporting industries and tourists.

Though more than half of licensed U.S. spaceports have never held a licensed launch, officials pushing Spaceport Camden note it would be among the few capable of firing rockets vertically as opposed to those that take off horizontal­ly like airplanes. They cite a recent report commission­ed by a Pentagon unit that found “the future space economy will be dependent on vertical launch.”

Steve Howard, Camden County's government administra­tor, has said a risk analysis for Spaceport Camden determined the chance of death or injury from a rocket launched at the site “ranges from less than one in 10 million to one in a billion.”

Still, critics of the project have noted that Spaceport Camden's license applicatio­n showed the type of small rockets it plans to fire have a risk of failure as high as 20%.

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