SpaceX made the return to flight request for the workhorse
vehicle on Thursday and the FAA gave approval on Friday. The
agency said flights may resume "provided all other license
requirements are met."
On Wednesday, the FAA grounded the Falcon 9 after failing an
attempt to land back on Earth during a routine Starlink mission,
forcing the company's second grounding this year.
SpaceX's Falcon 9 successfully launched a batch of Starlink
internet satellites into orbit early Wednesday from Florida. The
rocket's reusable first stage booster returned to Earth and
attempted to land on a sea-faring barge as usual, but toppled
into the ocean after a fiery touchdown.
Groundings of Falcon 9, a rocket that much of the Western world
relies on to put satellites and humans in space, are rare. The
rocket was previously grounded in July for the first time since
2016, following a second-stage failure in space that doomed a
batch of Starlink satellites.
After the July grounding, SpaceX returned Falcon 9 to flight 15
days later, after the FAA granted the company's request for an
expedited return to flight.
Falcon 9 is also due to launch two NASA astronauts in late
September on a Crew Dragon spacecraft that will bring home next
year the two astronauts who have been stuck on the International
Space Station after riding Boeing's troubled Starliner
spacecraft.
SpaceX has built a sizable fleet of reusable Falcon boosters
since the rocket's first launch in 2010 that has allowed the
company to vastly outpace its rivals in launch frequency.
Another Starlink mission was poised for launch shortly after
Wednesday's flight, from SpaceX's other launch site in southern
California, but the company called that mission off after the
landing failure.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Kanishka Singh in Washington;
Editing by Chris Reese and Diane Craft)
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