South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Cruises, space schedule can clash

Space Coast launch conflicts with cruise ships complicate travel

- By Jim Turner News Service of Florida

TA L L A H A S S E E — Ramping up launches at the nation’s busiest spaceport has increased conflicts with cruise ships at Port Canaveral, a space-industry official told lawmakers.

With launches from Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral expected to approach 100 this year, Dale Ketcham, Space Florida’s vice president of government and external relations, said talks are underway to address increasing issues involving cruise ships arriving and departing at Port Canaveral.

“These are big problems,” Ketcham told members of the Senate Military and Veterans Affairs, Space, and Domestic Security Committee on Wednesday. “They’re great problems to have. But they are serious problems that demand serious solutions, and those solutions will not be easy.”

Before launches, general exclusion zones for watercraft are imposed, with set hours and distances that change depending on the flight path. Similar temporary flight restrictio­ns are set by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion.

The zones are intended to prevent encounters in the air or, in cases of launch malfunctio­ns, prevent problems with debris in the water.

Ketcham indicated timing conflicts, with launches delaying cruise ship departures and arrivals, will only increase as the space industry hopes to double and triple the number of launches from the cape.

“If those cruise ships are delayed, you know, even an hour, then that ripples over into Orlando Internatio­nal Airport [flights],” Ketcham said. “And most of the people on those flights are cruise passengers. And they get delayed. And that trickles into the national airspace across the country. So, there are a lot of moving parts.”

While not the overall solution, Ketcham said one step could be to advise people arriving in Florida, particular­ly those intending to go out to sea, to be “aware of the fact that you’re in a busy state. It’s great to get to watch this stuff. But you don’t want to be in the wrong place.”

Ketcham’s comments came as Space Florida, which helps arrange financial incentives and opportunit­ies for aerospace companies, hopes to receive increased state funding.

Currently, Space Florida is working with $5.5 billion worth of private projects across the state, up from nearly $2.7 billion a decade ago.

The increase has resulted in Space Florida attracting more federal scrutiny, particular­ly from the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Securities and Exchange Commission, Ketcham said.

“As we get involved in more companies, particular­ly the startups that are trying to get off the ground, raise money, do funding rounds — and we do our due diligence and we’re working very closely with them — we’ve basically almost become insiders in what they’re trying to develop,” Ketcham said.

Space Florida’s state funding has changed little over the past decade.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has proposed a $114.8 billion budget for the 2023-2024 fiscal year that would provide $18.5 million to Space Florida, the same as in the current year.

The proposal includes $6 million for aerospace industry financing, business developmen­t and infrastruc­ture and $1 million to support research and commercial­ization projects.

“We’d like to think we’ve done a good job with those limited resources based upon where we were and where we are today,” Ketcham said.

Follow Orlando Sentinel space coverage at Facebook. com/goforlaunc­hsentinel.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Artemis I sits at Launch Pad 39-B at Kennedy Space Center on August 30, 2022.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Artemis I sits at Launch Pad 39-B at Kennedy Space Center on August 30, 2022.

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