What’s at stake in space for 2017-18? Over the next two years we will be facing some significant challenges and some opportunities–suborbital space tourism will be come a reality; multiple companies will demonstrate the ability to transport astronauts to and from the ISS; private companies will continue to pursue missions in space, including putting up commercial space stations, satellite servicing and maintenance, landing rovers on the moon and even launching spacecraft to Mars–and eventually, the FAA will partner with DoD in creating a civil space traffic management system with the objective of enhancing the safety of space operations and preserving the space environment.
Dr. George Nield, Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation (AST) for the Federal Aviation Administration is a name to know, as someone that will surely take space travel to the next level.
Like others in the FAA and commercial space organizations, Nield is caught in the crossfire between aircraft and spacecraft, commenting that the FAA is targeting integration but “the reality will be an evolution.”
“We have established a strategic initiative to integrate the commercial space operations into national airspace,” Nield told CNBC. “The money really is in the vehicles–the commercial industry is nothing like the government industry when it comes to money.”
Nield said he expects that the FAA will help private investments and stakeholders along in the development process, adding that “the government usually costs a little bit more and takes a little bit longer to do these things.”
The FAA has shown their authority over commercial space transportation activities since 1995, when the Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST) was established and the Secretary of Transportation was delegated some authority over to the FAA administration. FAA policy for commercial space transportation is primarily guided by the Commercial Space Launch Act (CSLA), the National Space Transportation Policy, and the National Space Policy. The CSLA gives the FAA the power to oversee public safety and to issue regulations, however as they see fit.
Nield stated in his 2016 address before the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure and the Subcommittee on Aviation that the FAA’s track record has proven time and time again to be beneficial (if not imperative) to both the aerospace industry and to the American people.
“The mission [AST] carries out is unique within the FAA in that it also includes the responsibility to encourage, facilitate and promote U.S. commercial space transportation,” Nield said. “This dual mission is an important part of our culture at FAA AST as we continue to provide an oversight framework–our track record should speak for itself.”
In his speech at the 20th Annual Commercial Space Transportation Conference Nield said he was pleased when the House and Senate iterations of a FY2017 appropriations bill that approved a $2 million increase for AST to climb to $19.8 million, included in the overall FAA budget request. The increase in budget, as Nield and other advocates in the industry have argued, is paramount to keeping pace with the rising tide.
“What we’re seeing right now is a bunch of new technology and a bunch of new approaches,” he said. “We want to make sure we do it right, and we do it safely.”
Dr. Nield is man of science, an architect of future operations of space flight–we need men like him to take us to new heights, to peer into the blackness of space and feel weightless against the great immensity of the final frontier.
Associate Administrator Nield will be addressing the Potomac Officer’s Club as a keynote speaker at the 2017 Space: Innovations, Programs, and Policies Summit to be held Oct. 18, 2017 at the Ritz-Carlton Tysons Corner in McLean, VA.
Click here to register
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