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Launch Approved? Not So Fast, Says Sluggish FAA
Reason magazine
|June 2024
MOST AMERICANS ARE eager to see NASA astronauts return to the moon and push humanity’s boundaries with future exploration of Mars.
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But those sky-high ambitions are being severely grounded by the plodding pace of rocket launch approvals from the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
Every vehicle soaring into space must first secure licensing from the FAA, an oversight process intended to ensure safety. For SpaceX, the current industry leader launching crews and payloads roughly every four days, the government’s bureaucratic inertia has become a highly problematic bottleneck.
This red tape has directly impacted testing of SpaceX’s Starship, the vehicle that NASA is relying upon to carry cargo and crew for the Artemis program’s later missions to the lunar surface. To date, there have been three orbital test flights of the massive rocket–in April and November 2023, and March of this year.
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