Orlando Sentinel

No SpaceX Starship launch on the horizon as FAA delays environmen­tal report again

- By Richard Tribou

Those waiting to hear what the FAA has to say about SpaceX’s plans to launch its new massive Starship and Super Heavy rocket on an orbital test flight will have to wait some more.

The FAA originally planned on releasing its Programmat­ic Environmen­tal Assessment (PEA) of the proposed flight at the end of 2021, but it has issued of a series of delays for the report after getting thousands of responses to the plan during a public comment period last year.

In the new year the expected release of the report has had several more delays, the most recent announced Friday, the latest day the FAA had targeted.

Now the FAA is aiming for May 31.

“SpaceX made multiple changes to its applicatio­n that require additional FAA analysis,” the agency stated in a press release. “The agency continues to review around 18,000 general public comments.”

Elon Musk’s plans to get an orbital test flight underway from the company’s southeast Texas launch facility can’t move forward without the PEA. Even then, that review doesn’t guarantee an OK for SpaceX to fly either, as Musk and others have stated it could pave the way for a more intense Environmen­tal Impact Statement (EIS) that could delay any Texas launch plans beyond 2022.

The FAA has cautioned that the company also needs to meet FAA safety, risk and financial responsibi­lity requiremen­ts.

If faced with an EIS, Musk has said plans for the Starship launch may need to shift in the short term to Kennedy Space Center, where work continues on hardware to support the new rocket from KSC’s Launch Pad 39-A, the current home to SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy launches.

Musk said in February he expects what would be the most powerful rocket to ever launch from the Earth still to have its first flight by the end of the year, even if it has to shift to Florida.

To date, the company has flown prototype versions of Starship without the booster to about 6 miles altitude and attempted landings back in Texas, sometimes with fiery results. Those used only three or fewer of the new, powerful Raptor engines.

The fully working orbital version will be coupled with a Super Heavy booster with 39 Raptor engines, 33 on the booster and six on Starship.

Even if SpaceX were to get FAA approval, the company announced it was switching to updated versions of its Raptor engines, so it’s not as if there’s a rocket ready to fly.

The plan for the next test flight, though, if it were to lift off from Texas, seeks to launch a stacked version of Starship and Super Heavy, have them separate, return the booster to land on a SpaceX vessel 20 miles offshore in the Gulf of Mexico while Starship achieves orbit for least one trip around the Earth and then lands in the Pacific Ocean.

Texas remains SpaceX’s preferred location for continued testing of Starship.

“Because we have a lot of launches going out of the Cape we didn’t want to disrupt the Cape activity — the operationa­l launches — with the advance R&D of Starship,” Musk said in February. “So it was important to decouple the operationa­l launches from the R&D launches. That’s why we’re at this location.”

2022 is proving to be the busiest yet for SpaceX for its existing stable of rockets with 17 launches through the first 17 weeks of the year, including one Friday.

Musk has said the company could hit as many as 60 in a calendar year, nearly doubling 2021’s record of 31 seen across KSC, Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and Vandenberg Space Force Base sites.

So a shift to KSC for Starship testing could prove complicate­d.

When it does launch, the Starship and Super Heavy combo would generate more than 16 million pounds of thrust. That nearly doubles the power of NASA’s planned Artemis flights and more than doubles those of the Apollo missions.

Immediate plans for Starship are for Starlink satellite delivery to add to the company’s growing constellat­ion of internet satellites, as well as to develop a version to assist NASA in getting humans back on the moon by 2025. Also upcoming is a tourist flight to orbit the moon funded by a Japanese fashion tycoon, who’s taking along several artists.

The main purpose for its developmen­t, though, is eventually to help create a self-sustaining colony on Mars.

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