SpaceX to shift Florida launches to new
pad after explosion
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[September 03, 2016]
By Irene Klotz
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (Reuters) - SpaceX
said on Friday it would shift Florida flights to a nearly completed
second site after damage to its launch pad on Thursday from the
explosion of a rocket belonging to the space services company run by
Elon Musk.
The Federal Aviation Administration has sent seven people to Florida to
supervise investigation of the disaster, said FAA spokesman Hank Price.
The agency, which oversees U.S. commercial rocket launches, requires
that SpaceX’s flights be suspended pending results of the probe.
Any sign of rocket malfunction could require changes throughout the
SpaceX fleet. After a SpaceX rocket exploded in June 2015, the program
was paused for six months while defective brackets were replaced in
Falcon 9 launch vehicles.
Damage to SpaceX’s Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station
is still being assessed.
"The pad clearly incurred damage, but the scope has yet to be fully
determined," SpaceX said in a statement late Friday.
Pictures of the launch site after the explosion showed the top portion
of a launch pad tower, which is used to raise the rocket and support it
vertically, had canted over.
The U.S. Air Force said in a statement that damage appeared to be
contained within SpaceX's launch complex.
The cause of the accident, which destroyed a $200 million communications
satellite, is under investigation. Meanwhile, more than 70 missions
aboard Falcon rockets, worth more than $10 billion, are on hold.
With its launch pad likely facing major repairs, SpaceX said it would
use a second Florida site, called 39A, which is located a few miles
north at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center and was used for space shuttle
missions.
The pad is on schedule to be operational in November, SpaceX said. The
company had planned to use the pad for the first time later this year
for a test flight of its new Falcon Heavy rocket.
NASA spokesman Michael Curie said in an email that the site could be
used for commercial and government flights, and SpaceX President Gwynne
Shotwell in a May conference said one customer, SES SA of Luxembourg,
had expressed interest in flying from the historic launch pad.
Other customers slated for Falcon 9 launches from Florida in 2016 are
EchoStar Corp of Englewood, Colorado, South Korea’s KT Sat and NASA. In
addition, SpaceX has contracts to fly satellites for Iridium
Communications Inc, Taiwan’s National Space Organization and
Seattle-based Spaceflight from its West Coast launch site at Vandenberg
Air Force Base in California.
"Our number one priority is to safely and reliably return to flight for
our customers," SpaceX said.
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An explosion on the launch site of a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is shown
in this still image from video in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S.
September 1, 2016. U.S. Launch Report/Handout via REUTERS
The last time a launch pad sustained heavy damage was in October
2014 when an Orbital Antares rocket exploded seconds after liftoff
from Wallops Island, Virginia. The explosion sent debris falling
back onto the launch site. The pad is due to return to service this
month after $15 million worth of repairs.
The FAA had required that SpaceX buy $12 million in liability
insurance and $13 million policy to cover any damage to government
property during pre-launch activities, according to a Commercial
Space Transportation License the FAA issued to SpaceX in January
2016 for six commercial satellite launches in Florida.
SpaceX did not respond to questions about what additional insurance
it has, if any, to cover damage to its own equipment.
United Launch Alliance, a partnership of Lockheed-Martin Corp and
Boeing Co that flies its Atlas rockets at a pad next to SpaceX's,
said on Friday it had inspected its facility and found no damage or
concerns.
SpaceX’s next launch had been scheduled for mid-September from
California. Its next flight from Florida was targeted for October.
That California flight could go ahead as soon as the rocket is
deemed ready, but the pad cannot substitute for the one in Florida.
SpaceX uses Vandenberg to launch satellites requiring polar orbits,
while Florida is better situated for satellites heading into
equatorial orbits and for cargo ships flying to the International
Space Station for NASA.
SpaceX was founded by Musk in 2002, and the Hawthorne,
California-based company began launching its Falcon 9 rockets in
June 2010. Since then, it has racked up 27 successful flights and
one launch accident in June 2015 that destroyed a load of cargo
headed for the space station.
(Reporting by Irene Klotz; Editing by Meredith Mazzilli and Andrew
Hay)
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