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Space

A Nearly 20-Year Ban on Human Spaceflight Regulations Set To Expire (arstechnica.com) 25

An anonymous reader shares a report: In 2004, Congress passed a law that established a moratorium on federal safety regulations for commercial astronauts and space tourists riding to space on new privately owned rockets and spacecraft. The idea was to allow time for new space companies to establish themselves before falling under the burden of regulations, an eventuality that spaceflight startups argued could impede the industry's development. The moratorium is also known as a "learning period," a term that describes the purpose of the provision. It's supposed to give companies and the Federal Aviation Administration -- the agency tasked with overseeing commercial human spaceflight, launch, and re-entry operations -- time to learn how to safely fly in space and develop smart regulations, those that make spaceflight safer but don't restrict innovation. Without action from Congress, by the end of September, the moratorium on human spaceflight regulations will expire. That has many in the commercial space industry concerned.

The House Science Committee is considering a commercial space bill that might extend the learning period, but the content of the bill hasn't been released yet. Rep. Frank Lucas (R-Okla.), chair of the House Science Committee, said one of his priorities in developing the space bill is ensuring a "thoughtful regulatory environment that supports innovation." Given the hotly partisan tenor of Capitol Hill and a range of other priorities, it's not clear if the bill -- whatever it says -- can be passed before October 1. "Things are sort of moving, but... how do you deal with the moratorium? Can you get that by October 1 and get something passed? Is that something everyone can agree to, or is that going to get bogged down? You just don't know right now, and that's just a bad place to be," said Allen Cutler, president of the Coalition for Deep Space Exploration, in a panel discussion at the John Glenn Memorial Symposium earlier this month.

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A Nearly 20-Year Ban on Human Spaceflight Regulations Set To Expire

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  • The next time an argument is started on how the US forgot how to get a vehicle in orbit think of the 20 year plan to let the private sector catch up.....

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      We never forgot how to get a vehicle into orbit. We just used Russian engines becuase the Russians could supply very good engines cheap. Some of them were even surplus engines sitting around in the infamous "forest of engines".

      In the late 90s early 2000s, there were reasonable security arguments for throwing the Russian rocket industry a bone. Russia was not the international pariah it is today, and it had a lot of valuable Soviet era rocket engine knowledge we'd rather stay in Russia rather than to go to

  • I knew all these vanity projects got all the free R&D NASA's provided, decades of research they didn't have to do. But they've also been operating under lax regulations? (I know, shocker.)

    Fuck that, let the learning period expire. They're throwing food at the kid's table, make them sit up straight with the grown ups.

    • This is the dumbest thing I've read today. The last 20 years have seen exceptional innovation in space flight. Take your noxious self somewhere else please.

  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Thursday July 27, 2023 @11:35AM (#63718288)

    The commercial space flight industry has made huge strides in the past 20 years and has been delivering on its promise to reduce costs. Yet the whole industry is still in its infancy, space is hard, and it still takes time. Does anyone really want to further slow that progress down?

    This should simply be extended another couple decades. I know some have had fun painting Musk as a libertarian cowboy to bury the real headline of SpaceX crushing the performance of the public sector but pushing this PR image doesn't seem especially critical and most of the people they are pushing this message to will never know about extending this either way.

  • We're seeing what happens when the private sector isn't burdened by excessive government regulation that does nothing except a) slow the private sector down especially companies that aren't old-guard aerospace b) makes it more expensive and c) fuels more bureaucracy. It's important to note that any federal regulations are only going to apply to US companies. Other countries aren't affected and are likely to be lobbying for it.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      We're seeing what happens when the private sector isn't burdened by excessive government regulation that does nothing except a) slow the private sector down especially companies that aren't old-guard

      I have one word for you: OceanGate.

  • I'm surprised only SpaceX has their astronauts wear them, But that's because they are the only ones actually going to space.

As long as we're going to reinvent the wheel again, we might as well try making it round this time. - Mike Dennison

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