

Only one more cooperative process – ensuring “Section 4(f)” compliance – still needs to be completed. The FAA appears to be on track to release the Environmental Assessment by the end of the month. The Section 106 Review for Starship from Boca Chica is complete.
SPACEX WILL HOPEFULLY LAUNCH STARSHIP FLIGHT UPDATE
The most important part of the update is the implication that SpaceX and the FAA have now completed almost every aspect of the PEA that requires cooperation with other federal agencies and local stakeholders. However, just a few days ago and about a week after the FAA’s latest one-to-two-month PEA delay announcement, the agency updated an online dashboard to show that the fourth of five main PEA processes had been completed successfully. Until very recently, the fate of Starbase’s PEA was almost completely indeterminable and could have gone any number of ways – most of which would not be favorable for SpaceX.

In some ways, both tasks are unprecedented, but the bureaucratic processes involved are still largely the same as those SpaceX has successfully navigated over the last two decades.įirst up, the FAA’s environmental review. Both revolve around the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), which – in SpaceX’s case – is responsible for completing a ‘programmatic environmental assessment’ (PEA) of orbital Starship launches out of Boca Chica, Texas and issuing a launch license for the largest and most powerful rocket ever built.
