SpaceX's Shotwell Says US Regulators Must 'Go Faster'
SpaceX President Gwynne Shotwell fired off fresh criticism at US regulators on Friday, saying rocket launch approvals need to catch up with the pace her company is innovating.
[....] Elon Musk's rocket and satellite company plans to launch the sixth major test of its new Starship vehicle on Tuesday, and sees as many as 400 launches of the moon and Mars craft over the next four years, Shotwell said. That compares with a record 148 missions that US regulators authorized for the entire commercial space industry in the government's most recent fiscal year.
[....] In September, Musk, SpaceX's founder and Chief Executive Officer, called on the head of the FAA to resign and claimed that government paperwork to license a launch takes longer than building the actual rocket.
On Thursday, the FAA said it plans to update its launch and reentry licensing rule, as the number of space operations could more than double by 2028, it said.
What did FAA do back when aircraft were new and novel, and could be dangerous?
(Score: 3, Informative) by pe1rxq on Friday November 22, @11:24PM (1 child)
The first launch left a huge crater and launched not only a rocket but also large chunks of the launch pad. Parts of that debris reached publicly accessible areas. Luckily nobody got hurt, but in hindsight they did take a larger than expected risk wrt death and injury. And they probably knew it was a risk as the water deluge system was already planned to be added.
(Score: 1) by khallow on Saturday November 23, @02:07AM
And now they won't do that again. That's how one learns to do things safely.