SpaceX in talks to land and recover Starship rocket off Australia's
coast
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[July 30, 2024]
By Joey Roulette
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - SpaceX is in talks with U.S. and Australian
officials to land and recover one of its Starship rockets off
Australia's coast, a possible first step toward a bigger presence for
Elon Musk's company in the region as the two countries bolster security
ties, according to three people familiar with the plans.
Since a Starship rocket made a controlled splashdown for the first time
in June in the Indian Ocean, SpaceX has been eager to expand its testing
campaign. Successful landings and recovery of the boosters afterward are
important elements of the speedy development of the giant and reusable
rocket designed to launch satellites to orbit and land astronauts on the
moon.
The plan would be to launch Starship from a SpaceX facility in Texas,
land it in the sea off Australia's coast and recover it on Australian
territory. Getting permission to do so would require loosening U.S.
export controls on sophisticated space technologies bound for Australia,
according to the sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity.
President Joe Biden's administration already has sought to ease similar
restrictions within the AUKUS security alliance, a grouping of the
United States, Australia and Britain aimed at countering China.
SpaceX, the U.S. Space Force and the Australian Space Agency did not
immediately reply to requests for comment.
Towing Starship, after it has landed in the ocean or on a barge, to a
nearby port on Australia's western or northern coasts would be ideal,
though more specific plans and locations are still being discussed, the
sources said.
The conversations underscore the U.S. determination to help Australia
build up its military as a deterrent to an increasingly assertive China
in the region.
The proposed SpaceX arrangement would put more trust in a close American
ally that for years has sought to expand its space defense program,
strengthen civil and military space ties with the United States and
stimulate its own space industrial base.
Discussions in recent weeks between SpaceX executives and U.S. and
Australian officials have focused on regulatory hurdles in bringing a
recovered Starship booster ashore in a foreign country, the sources
said. Because the talks are ongoing, the timing of any Starship landing
off Australia remained unclear.
The sources said the proposed test-landings likely would be the first
phase of a larger future Australian presence for SpaceX that could
include launching from a facility on the continent or landing a Starship
booster on the ground instead of the ocean, though discussions on those
possibilities are in the early stages.
In developing its partially reusable Falcon 9 about a decade ago, SpaceX
also made ocean-based test landings before attempting touchdowns on land
and atop barges at sea. Falcon 9 is now SpaceX's workhorse rocket, and
its first-stage booster has made hundreds of routine landings from
space.
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SpaceX Starship passes over the earth during its fourth flight test
from the company's Boca Chica launchpad, near Brownsville, Texas,
U.S. June 6, 2024, in a still image from video. SpaceX/Handout via
REUTERS/ File Photo
A TOWERING ROCKET
Starship is a 400-foot (120-meter) tall two-stage rocket designed to
be fully reusable. It represents SpaceX's next-generation rocket
system, meant to loft large batches of satellites into space, land
NASA astronauts on the lunar surface and potentially ferry military
cargo around the world in roughly 90 minutes.
Starship's June test flight was its most successful to date.
Starship was launched from Texas toward space on a suborbital
trajectory that sent it freefalling at hypersonic speeds back
through Earth's atmosphere before reigniting its engines for a soft
splashdown in the Indian Ocean, about 90 minutes after launch. Its
SuperHeavy booster landed in the Gulf of Mexico.
Previous test flights had ended with Starship disintegrating before
a safe landing could be achieved. The June flight has led SpaceX to
pursue a new phase of more complicated landing tests, according to
multiple people familiar with the campaign.
The U.S. Air Force Research Laboratory's conceptual "Rocket Cargo"
program envisions using suborbital rockets to swiftly deliver
military cargo around the world in 90 minutes, called point-to-point
delivery. Some at the Pentagon viewed the June Starship test launch
as a crucial demonstration of this program, according to U.S.
defense officials.
A Starship launch from Texas and landing off Australia could further
demonstrate point-to-point delivery.
While still in an early phase, the delivery time for rocket-based
cargo around the planet - taking advantage of orbital velocity of
17,000 miles per hour (27,350 kph) and a hypersonic reentry through
Earth's atmosphere - would be a fraction of the roughly 12 to 24
hours typically needed for traditional aircraft.
SpaceX since 2021 has been studying how to use to Starship for those
deliveries under a $102 million Pentagon contract. The program will
graduate to a more serious prototype effort with the U.S. Space
Force next year, according to 2025 budget documents.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette; editing by Will Dunham and Chris
Sanders)
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