SpaceX’s Starship launch operations are the subject of an ongoing environmental assessment. Depending on the outcome of that assessment it may also be required to go through a more detailed review culminating in an updated Environmental Impact Statement. Only after that process is complete can the Federal Aviation Administration move on to licensing a possible orbital Starship launch.
Those reviews and approvals will not be done in time for an early July launch, according to a source familiar with the licensing process.
That means that, for SpaceX to remain in compliance with federal rules, it will likely have to push back its target launch date.
So far, the company has only flown various early prototypes of the upper spacecraft portion of Starship. Those tests have all been relatively low-speed test “hops,” which involve the vehicles flying a few miles into the air before attempting to land upright. Only one landing in five such test flights conducted to this point has been successful.
An orbital launch would require a similar Starship spacecraft to be stacked on top of what SpaceX is calling its “Super Heavy” booster, a behemoth envisioned at 230 feet tall which has for years existed in various renderings and design mockups but has yet to be fully assembled or launched.
The upper Starship spacecraft will continue through orbit, burning its engines for roughly nine minutes. About an hour and a half after that, it would dive back into the Earth’s atmosphere and make a splashdown in the Pacific, about 60 miles from the Hawaiian island of Kauai.
The document did not give a proposed flight date, though it did list a “requested period of operation” for between June 20 and December 20 of 2021.
Twenty-five days from Monday, when the speech aired for Northwestern students, would be July 9, though it’s unclear when Shotwell recorded the commencement speech.
Musk did share an early morning update on Twitter Tuesday, confirming that SpaceX is continuing to piece together the first Super Heavy booster at its facilities in South Texas.
The final version of the upper Starship spacecraft is expected to contain six rocket engines, while the Super Heavy booster could have nearly 30, giving the rocket more than 16 million pounds of thrust. That’s more than twice the total thrust output of NASA’s Saturn V rocket, which powered the mid-20th century moon landings, and for decades has held the record for the most powerful launch vehicle ever flown.
SpaceX is known to set aggressive target dates for major test launches, and to blow past them. It’s common in aerospace for design and development of new spacecraft to take far longer than initially anticipated.
But SpaceX has been particularly aggressive with its Starship testing schedule, angling to rapidly conduct test flights in order to collect data rather than taking the more traditional approach of thoroughly vetting a spacecraft’s design and putting it through numerous ground tests before putting it on a launch pad.
That matter has since been resolved, allowing the company to move forward with suborbital testing of its Starship spacecraft prototypes.
But approval for an orbital launch hinges on whether federal regulators can determine that the Super Heavy booster, which packs many times the amount of power as the spacecraft portion alone, can launch from South Texas without posing a significant threat to nearby property, people or the surrounding environment.
More News
Paul Pelosi attacker trafficks in conspiracy theories in call to TV station after video release | CNN Politics
Shooting in Baltimore kills 1 and wounds 3 others, including a 2-year-old | CNN
Trump takes aim at DeSantis in first major campaign swing, says he’s trying to ‘rewrite history’ on his Covid-19 record | CNN Politics