Monday, June 13, 2022

FAA Requiring SpaceX Make Changes To TX Launch Site


The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has determined that SpaceX’s Plans for the company’s massive Starbase Launch site in South Texas, will have some Environmental Impacts to the surrounding Land and Area, but Not enough to require a Full Environmental Impact Statement. Now, SpaceX will need to make more than 75 Changes to its Proposal, if the Company wants to avoid additional Review and eventually receive a License from the FAA to Launch its new Starship Rocket to Orbit from the site.

SpaceX’s Starbase facility is located in a small town called Boca Chica, Texas, right on the Southern tip of Texas along the Rio Grande river and the US-Mexico border.

For the last few years, SpaceX has used the site to construct Full-Scale Prototypes of Starship, the company’s next-generation monster Rocket designed to take People and Cargo to deep-space destinations like the Moon and Mars. SpaceX has already conducted various high-altitude test flights with Starship prototypes from Starbase, but now, the company hopes to actually launch Starship to Space for the First time and send the vehicle to Orbit.

In order to launch Starship to orbit from Starbase, SpaceX first needs a Launch License from the FAA. And the fate of SpaceX’s Starbase facility in Boca Chica has been hanging in the balance for the last year and a half as the FAA has been conducting an Environmental Review of how the company’s launch operations would impact the surrounding area. Now with a decision made, SpaceX will need to address the more than 75 actions that the FAA has listed, in order for the company to lessen its impact on the area. If SpaceX makes those changes, it should help pave the way for the company to receive a Launch License for Starship, though that still isn’t guaranteed.

SpaceX didn’t originally plan to launch its future Moon and Mars Rocket from Texas. SpaceX purchased its first piece of land in Boca Chica back in 2012 with the intent to create a purely Commercial launch site where the company could launch its much smaller Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy Rockets. Ultimately SpaceX envisioned launching up to 12 times a year from the area, away from the hustle and bustle of its much busier launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. With that goal in mind, the FAA conducted a full Environmental Review of SpaceX’s plans, and in 2014, the Agency published an Environmental Impact Statement (EIS), detailing how those smaller launches would affect the area. An EIS can take many months and often years to complete, as it requires interviewing experts, scientists, business officials, and residents as well as conducting rigorous analysis and research about how a proposed action will impact the nearby human environment.

However, SpaceX’s plans have significantly changed since that first EIS was published. Beginning in 2018, the company seriously ramped up production activities in Boca Chica after deciding to devote the South Texas facility solely to the production of Starship prototypes. The more modest commercial launch facility that SpaceX once imagined has morphed into a thriving installation, filled with massive warehouses and tents and dominated by round-the-clock construction conducted by thousands of employees.

As SpaceX’s presence in the area grew, the company also began conducting high-altitude flight tests with its Starship prototypes, launching the vehicles up to heights around 30,000 to 40,000 feet in the air before attempting to land them back on Earth. Most of those tests ended in fiery explosions, with only one successfully sticking its landing. One prototype blew apart just before it was supposed to land in March 2021, spreading metal debris across the nearby wildlife refuge.

Ultimately SpaceX estimated that it would have to close access to the state highway a total of 500 hours each year for normal operations and an extra 300 hours each year for anomalies. And things would certainly change as SpaceX progressed in its development. SpaceX anticipated that the number of orbital launches would increase over time with suborbital flights decreasing. Beyond the disruption, SpaceX also outlined other major additions to its plans, including the creation of a natural gas pretreatment plant, used to purify methane to be used in the Starship rocket. And there was speculation that SpaceX would need to build a pipeline to transport gas to the plant. SpaceX has since scrapped those plans)

As part of its Environmental review, the FAA held a comment period for SpaceX’s proposed plans, which drew both intense criticism and support from members of the public. Many critics demanded that the FAA conduct a new EIS, as the one that was conducted in 2014 was no longer adequate based on SpaceX’s new plans. The FAA said it received more than 18,000 comments during that period, which contributed to prolonging the decision-making process as SpaceX had to draft responses to each of the comments. The FAA also had to consult with various government agencies to make its decision, including the US Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) and National Park Service, which raised some questions about SpaceX’s potential effects on the area. In a biological opinion given to the FAA, the FWS noted there’s been a decrease in the piping plover population, an endangered bird that nests in Boca Chica, correlated with the increase in SpaceX activity in the area, CNBC reported.

Prior to the FAA decision, SpaceX also received a potential blow to its plans in Boca Chica from the Army Corps of Engineers. In March, the Corps informed SpaceX that it was withdrawing the company’s permit application for plans to expand Starbase, citing a lack of requested information provided by the company. SpaceX can reactivate the permit application process by providing the information that the Corps requested, though it’s unclear if and when SpaceX will comply.

Meanwhile, SpaceX has been working on a potential Plan B for Starship. In December, the company began construction on a Starship launchpad in Cape Canaveral, Florida, an area that has been hosting Orbital launches for the last half century. SpaceX already operates Two launchpads out of the area for its Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy Rockets.










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