Monterey Herald

State officials weigh limits on launches of SpaceX

- By Salvador Hernandez

SpaceX has significan­tly increased the frequency of its rocket launches from a Santa Barbara County military base, and its plans to add even more have raised concerns by the California Coastal Commission over the impacts on the environmen­t and nearby communitie­s.

The company, officially Space Exploratio­n Technologi­es Corp., owned by billionair­e Elon Musk, has already breached an agreement between base officials and the coastal commission that limited the yearly launches from Vandenberg Space Force Base to six.

SpaceX has asked the commission for permission to launch up to 36 times per year from Vandenberg, as well as to conduct up to 12 landings a year at a second launch complex and an offshore landing spot in the Pacific Ocean.

Visible for miles around, the launches can create awe-inspiring spectacles as the aircraft hurtle up through the atmosphere, leaving behind a streak tracing the path of the rocket.

But nearer the base, the launches can force the closure and evacuation of nearby beaches and campground­s, and residents have reported their windows shaking and rattling from the apparent sonic booms.

“It's very stressful when you experience something like a sonic boom and you're not expecting it,” said Phil Simon, a resident of Ojai for 25 years who spoke to the commission Wednesday. “I don't know if the rockets being launched are different now, the trajectory is different, but something is different than how it was in the past.”

On Wednesday, the California Coastal Commission reviewed the request from the U.S. Space Force on behalf of the SpaceX projects and heard concerns from residents about the proposed increase in the number of launches. The panel also questioned whether the commission should practice more oversight over the launches.

But whether the commission even has the authority to limit the launches is unclear.

“We don't allow roosters in this city, why can't we regulate SpaceX?” Larry Steingold, an Ojai resident, asked the board.

Tasked with protecting the state's coastal resources, the state agency regulates the use of land and water along the coast and can issue, or deny, permits for developmen­t. When it comes to imposing its will over federal agencies —such as the U.S. Department of Defense — the commission's powers stop short.

The U.S. Space Force made the request on SpaceX's behalf because the company launches equipment for the Department of Defense.

“(With) federal agencies it's much more of a negotiatio­n and a thing of equal powers dynamic,” Cassidy Teufel, deputy director of the commission, said during the meeting.

Federal agencies negotiate agreements with the commission about such plans, but ultimately, Teufel said, the commission's approval is not required.

“If the commission were to reject, the federal agency could still decide to move forward,” he said.

Although SpaceX is a privately owned company, the Defense Department has argued that all the launches from Vandenberg — including those solely for the company's benefit — are “federal agency activity” or done on behalf of the agency.

About 25% of SpaceX rocket launches from the base are carrying Department of Defense payloads, said Space Force Col. Bryan Titus, operations vice commander at the base.

The vast majority of the rockets, however, are ferrying satellites into orbit to support SpaceX's private Starlink network, which provides internet services.

Officials with SpaceX did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Despite the private financial benefit to SpaceX, Titus argued that all of the rockets launched by the company were a benefit to the Defense Department, including its ability to rapidly increase its capacity to launch more rockets.

“I could argue that all launches that SpaceX does support the Department of Defense and our partners and allies,” he said during the meeting. “Starlink has been absolutely critical in the situation in Ukraine.”

“And to our enemies,” responded Commission­er Dayna Bochco. “Musk had a lot to say about that.”

Russia has banned the use of Starlink and the company has said it has denied giving the technology to Russia. Still, Ukrainian military officials have said Russian troops have been using the satellite network to communicat­e in the war.

Commission­ers and residents noted the local impacts of the increasing number of launches from Vandenberg.

Rocket launches that shut down nearby Jalama Beach for safety reasons were limited by the commission to no more than 12 this year, but commission staff noted that number had been surpassed in the first seven months of 2023.

According to a staff report, SpaceX conducted 13 rocket launches in 2022, more than double the number that had been agreed to that year. The company also exceeded the number in 2023, with 28 launches, before it first reached out to the coastal commission in December for permission to increase the number to 36 per year.

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN — LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? A SpaceX Falcon 9rocket with 22Starlink satellites cuts across the sky at dusk after taking off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County on March 18.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN — LOS ANGELES TIMES A SpaceX Falcon 9rocket with 22Starlink satellites cuts across the sky at dusk after taking off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in Santa Barbara County on March 18.

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