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                                                                                          Updated  March 12, 2024

Commercial Human Spaceflight Safety Regulations


The Department  of Transportation (DOT), acting through
the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), has regulatory
authority over commercial space launch and reentry,
including for spacecraft with human occupants. The FAA's
authority allows the agency to regulate the safety of human
occupants, but a statutory moratorium-or learning
period-limits the agency's ability to do so until May 11,
2024. This In Focus identifies considerations for Congress
as the end of the statutory learning period approaches.

Currently, private companies hope to create a market for
commercial human  spaceflight. In addition to contracts with
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
(NASA)  to support federal missions, companies such as
SpaceX  plan to transport private citizens into space. Other
companies  such as Axiom Space are developing orbital
platforms with the intent to host both government
astronauts and tourists in space. Virgin Galactic and Blue
Origin have carried tourists on suborbital launches, and
SpaceX  has launched both government astronauts and space
tourists to the International Space Station.

No commercial  spaceflight mission has yet resulted in a
fatality of a tourist or government astronaut. However, an
atmospheric test flight of a crewed commercial spacecraft
in 2014 resulted in the death of one pilot and injuries to
another. Several uncrewed commercial launches have failed
in the past decade. Given the potential risks, oversight for
these missions may be an area of continued congressional
concern.

Legislative Background
The Commercial  Space Launch Amendments   Act of 2004
(P.L. 108-492) gave DOT the authority to regulate the
launch and re-entry of commercial spacecraft, including
those carrying humans, after the learning period noted
above. The FAA  has authority to impose licensing
requirements after the learning period on commercial
launches carrying humans in order to protect those
occupants. The authority is implemented by the FAA Office
of Commercial  Space Transportation (AST). Operations in
orbit, following launch and prior to reentry, are not under
FAA  jurisdiction. For launch and reentry regulations, the
Commercial  Space Launch Amendments   Act of 2004 set a
statutory moratorium of eight years (the learning period)
before the FAA could promulgate commercial human
spaceflight regulations, beyond its statuary authorities
described below under 51 U.S.C. §50905(c) and 14 C.F.R.
§460. The learning period moratorium was intended to
allow the nascent commercial spaceflight industry to
develop without potential regulatory burdens.

FAA  regulatory authority under 51 U.S.C. §50905(c) is not
subject to the learning period moratorium. This authority


allows FAA  regulation of commercial operators when
restricting or prohibiting design features or operating
practices that have resulted in serious or fatal injury or
contributed to an event posing a high risk of serious or fatal
injury. The FAA is also able to impose requirements on
spacecraft crew in support of the agency's mission to
protect public safety under 14 C.F.R. §460, as crew is
considered by the agency to be part of the flight safety
system. As such, the FAA has created requirements that
focus on crew qualifications, medical screening, life
support, and similar basic safety elements. Additionally,
under 14 C.F.R §460.41-460.53 the FAA requires licensees
to inform all human occupants of commercial spacecraft, in
writing, of potential risks.

The learning period has been extended several times, most
recently until May 11, 2024, by the Airport and Airway
Extension Act of 2024 (P.L. 118-41). Two bills in the 118th
Congress-H.R.   5617 and H.R. 6131-would   extend the
learning period to October 1, 2031.

The 2015 CSLCA   directed the FAA and its Commercial
Space Transportation Advisory Committee (COMSTAC) to
facilitate the development of voluntary industry consensus
safety standards and a safety framework that may include
regulation. It also directed FAA, in consultation with
COMSTAC, to report   on (1) the commercial space
industry's progress toward developing the aforementioned
standards and framework, (2) metrics that could indicate the
readiness of industry and the FAA to transition to the new
framework, and (3) a transition plan.

The FAA  was  also directed to provide updates on progress
every 30 months and to provide 2 separate reports on a new
safety framework and transition plan in both 2018 and
2022. The FAA  was instructed by the 2015 CSLCA to take
into consideration industry standards identified within these
reports when developing regulations after the expiration of
the learning period. The CSLCA also required the FAA to
provide Congress with an independent assessment of
industry progress towards developing and adopting
voluntary consensus standards, industry and FAA readiness
to transition to a new safety framework, and whether further
standards development or regulation would be appropriate.

In 2017, the FAA delivered a report to Congress that
identified possible safety framework features, including
standards, a voluntary reporting system, and compliance
mechanisms;  detailed industry progress towards voluntary
consensus standards development and adoption; and
identified several readiness indicators that could be used
to assess industry and FAA readiness to transition to a new
safety framework.

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