Private company wins U.S.
clearance to fly to the moon
Send a link to a friend
[August 03, 2016]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - A
Florida-based company won U.S. government permission on Wednesday to
send a robotic lander to the moon next year, the firm's founder
said, marking the first time the United States has cleared a private
space mission to fly beyond Earth’s orbit.
The Federal Aviation Administration's unprecedented go-ahead for the
Moon Express mission also sets a legal and regulatory framework for
a host of other commercial expeditions to the moon, asteroids and
Mars.
As approved by the FAA's Office of Commercial Space Transportation,
the privately held Moon Express, headquartered in Cape Canaveral,
plans to fly a suitcase-sized lander to the moon for a two-week
mission in 2017, said the company founder and chief executive Bob
Richards.
The spacecraft will carry a number of science experiments and some
commercial cargo on its one-way trip to the lunar surface, including
cremated human remains, and will beam back pictures and video to
Earth, the company said.
Before now, no government agency was recognized as having authority
to oversee private missions beyond Earth's orbit, though a 1967
international treaty holds the United States responsible for any
flights into space by its non-government entities.
So far, only government agencies have flown spacecraft beyond the
orbit of the Earth.
To address the conundrum, the FAA, which already exercises
jurisdiction over commercial rocket launches in the United States,
led an interagency review of the Moon Express proposal, which
included steps the company would take to ensure compliance with the
1967 Outer Space Treaty.
“It’s been a very steep mountain,” Richards said in a telephone
interview. “We had to lay the track at the same time that we wanted
to do the mission.”
Other companies are expected to soon follow the same framework.
Elon Musk, founder and chief executive of Space Exploration
Technologies, plans to fly a spacecraft to Mars in 2018, a mission
that raises a host of issues dealing with protecting potential
indigenous life on the planet from contamination by Earth microbes.
[to top of second column] |
The Apollo 11 Lunar Module ascent stage, with astronauts Neil A.
Armstrong and Edwin E. Aldrin Jr. aboard, is photographed from the
Command and Service Modules in lunar orbit in this July, 1969 file
photo. Photo courtesy of NASA/Handout via REUTERS
Among other private space ventures in the works are missions to mine asteroids,
operate science labs and repair and service satellites.
Planetary protection is less of a concern on the moon, but Moon Express did have
to contend with concerns about disturbing Apollo and other historic lunar
landing sites, among other issues.
“We proposed a scenario that built on the existing FAA mission-approval
framework," Richards said.
NASA and other agencies, including the Defense, State and Commerce departments,
ultimately agreed that no new law was necessary, Richards said.
As part of the agreement, NASA will advise, but not regulate, Moon Express
activities on the lunar surface.
(Editing by Steve Gorman and Andrew Hay)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|