Exclusive-Biden administration drafting executive order to simplify
space rules -sources
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[December 10, 2022]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden's administration is
drafting an executive order intended to streamline approval for private
rocket launches amid a broader effort to bring legal and regulatory
clarity for American companies on everything from space travel to
private space stations, according to two U.S. officials familiar with
the effort.
The order would be part of a push by the White House's National Space
Council to modernize U.S. space regulation, which has failed to keep up
with the increasingly ambitious pace of private-sector investment and
development.
The order, slated to be ready for Biden to sign by early 2023, is meant
to simplify licensing procedures under existing laws for more routine
space activities like launching rockets and deploying satellites, said
one of the sources, who asked not to be named.
The order will task the U.S. Department of Commerce with creating an
online tool to help guide companies through various agencies' licensing
processes for space-related activities, one of the sources said.
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, who chairs the National Space
Council, has signaled her intention to codify new rules for private
space activities, but the plan for the executive order has not been
reported.
A spokeswoman for Harris did not immediately respond to a request for
comment.
While past administrations have made little progress revamping U.S.
space laws, the Biden administration's broader effort to spur new rules,
in addition to those targeted in the executive order, comes with greater
urgency because of the pace of private investment in space. NASA also is
pushing to privatize much of its low-Earth orbit activities.
Companies like Elon Musk's SpaceX, Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin, Boeing and
many more are expected to invest billions of dollars in the next decade
in projects including private space stations, service satellites and
spaceships in orbit.
A team of U.S. officials drafting the executive order is also studying
ways to spur congressional action that would give certain federal
agencies the role of authorizing and supervising those space ventures,
one of the sources said.
The executive order is considered an early step to simplify existing
regulations before new rules take shape. Companies like Blue Origin,
Axiom Space and others are developing private space stations with
unclear procedures for how they can court foreign governments as
customers or execute their missions in space.
Other unregulated areas include asteroid mining, for which startup
AstroForge has announced plans, and clearing orbital debris, which
companies like Astroscale want to tackle.
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U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris visits
Vandenberg Space Force Base in Lompoc, California, U.S. April 18,
2022. REUTERS/Mike Blake/File Photo
'A LAWLESS PLACE'
Current U.S. regulations targeted in the order cover space-related
activities on Earth, such as the Federal Aviation Administration's
oversight of launch site safety and the Federal Communications
Commission's allocation of satellite spectrum.
However, a lack of rules governing private in-space activities
complicates space companies' ties with prospective customers,
investors and insurers that need more legal certainty.
"It's basically ... a lawless place," John Logsdon, founder of
George Washington University's space policy institute, said of
space.
NASA hopes to land humans on the moon before the end of the decade
under its Artemis program, which involves dozens of companies
including SpaceX.
Companies are increasingly stepping in for other countries.
Private space stations like Orbital Reef, which Blue Origin is
developing with Boeing and Sierra Space, could be deployed by 2030.
Those stations would replace the International Space Station, an
aging orbital science lab managed by a group of governments
including the United States, Russia and the European Space Agency.
In that new world, government space powers will become customers and
are expected to provide early critical funding, industry executives
said. How the parties will interact remains unclear.
"I have to have a conducive regulatory environment," Blue Origin
senior vice president Brent Sherwood said in an interview in
September.
White House officials have held several "listening sessions" with
space companies since Nov. 14 to discuss what rules the space
industry would like to see, according to people familiar with the
meetings.
The Biden administration's push to update space regulations is
crucial for keeping the U.S. in line with international law. The
1967 Outer Space Treaty requires countries to supervise the cosmic
activities of their companies and largely makes governments
responsible for those entities' space behavior.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington, editing by Ben Klayman
and Nick Zieminski)
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