BOULDER, Colo.
- One of the leaders in the effort to
estab¬lish a commercial suborbital tourism industry lashed out at the U.S.
Federal Aviation Administration during an April 20 congressional hearing, accusing
the agency of nearly destroying his efforts by over-regulating the early
flights.
"It
increased the risk for my test pilots. It did not reduce the risk to the
noninvolved public. It destroyed our safety policy of always question the
product, never defend it," said Burt Rutan, the designer of SpaceShipOne, the
first privately built vehicle to reach space.
In his
testimony to members of the House Science space and aeronautics subcommittee
Rutan said the FAA's paperwork and regulations led to cost overruns. While he
still expects the commercial space industry to thrive, Rutan said the current
regulatory system is need of repair.
The
regulatory process imposed by FAA's Office of Space Transportation (AST), Rutan
said, "was grossly misapplied for our research tests. And worse yet, is likely
to be misapplied for the regulation of future commercial spaceliners."
Rutan said the FAA is already in short supply of people to
maintain its regulatory vigil over the airline industry. He also said there is
a need for streamlining the certification of new commercial spaceships.
In an
e-mailed reply to a request for a response to Rutan's accusations, AST's top official
defended her agency's handling of the fledgling space tourism industry.
"FAA is
extremely proud of our safety record and we intend to maintain this level of
public safety as we work with developers of suborbital reusable launch vehicles," said Patricia Grace Smith, the FAA's associate administrator
for commercial space transportation. "The space tourism sector represents a
promising new market that will generate economic benefits for our nation but only
if it is considered a sage and reliable form of transportation. We are striving
to support and promote the development of this new industry by offering a
regulatory environment that fosters innovation and creativity."
Rutan was one of a group of experts in the emerging
commercial space market to testify before lawmakers. Congress is attempting to
define what role the government should or should not play in supporting
entrepreneurial space progress.
The
potential of space tourism was made all the more real by last year's successful
suborbital flights by Rutan's SpaceShipOne.
Work is underway to build an affordable
and safe vehicle to make personal spaceflight a reality, said Rutan, the chief designer
of SpaceShipOne and the head of Mojave, Calif.-based Scaled Composites. Rutan
envisions multiple competing spaceline operators vying for space travel¬er
dollars.
"The
airline experience has shown us that it is not just technology that provides safety
but the maturity that comes from a high-level of flight activity," Rutan said, adding
that "the AST process, focusing only on the noninvolved public, just about ru¬ined
my program."
AST's
stated mission is to ensure protec¬tion of the public, property, and the national
security and foreign policy interests of the United States during a commercial launch
or re-entry activity, and to encour¬age, facilitate and promote U.S. commercial
space transportation.
"This problem must be solved quickly to support an
industry that needs a proper research environment to allow innovation," Rutan
said.
Once a
commercial spaceliner is realized, Rutan said, it will likely fly as many as 500
passengers the first year. And by the fifth year, that number
would rise to 3,000 people per year. By the twelfth year of operations, at
least 50,000 to 100,000 individuals "will have enjoyed the black sky view of suborbital
flight," he said.
In
September 2004 Sir Richard Branson announced that his newly formed Virgin Galactic
spaceline would buy a fleet of spacecraft based on SpaceShipOne's design to
carry tourists into suborbital space. The technology is owned by Microsoft
mogul Paul Allen, and is called Mojave Aerospace Ventures.
"We've not taken lightly the idea of
entering the personal spaceflight market," said Will Whitehorn, president of
Virgin Galactic and the director of group corporate affairs and brand development
for Virgin Manage¬ment Limited, during the hearing.
"We believe
that within five years we can create a viable business," he said, an enterprise
that would lead to eventual reduction of Earth-to-space ticket costs from an
initial fee of $200,000 a seat.
Whitehorn
said Virgin Galactic would like to order at least five SpaceShipTwo vehicles
and start operations before the end of the decade. "We would like to be going through
a testing process by the end of 2007 ... and commercial operation by 2008, if that
was possible," he testified.
There's a
big difference in purchasing an aircraft from airline manufacturers, contrasted
to buying a suborbital spaceship, Whitehorn suggested. "We are in uncharted
territory here ... at the experimental cutting edge of a new industry."
Whitehorn
said since the announcement of their suborbital passenger plans,
Virgin Galactic has received 29,000 applications. He emphasized that they were
not moving forward on the space travel business "as a rich billionaire's toy
adventure."
"The
pioneer astronauts will help fund the process of making personal spaceflight something
that people ... can enjoy and af¬ford in the future," Whitehorn said. "We be¬lieve
that, eventually, we could get it down to $25,000 or $30,000 after a number of years,
per flight, per person."
Rutan would
not provide specific details on his spaceliner design. "We're only at the preliminary
stage of technology development," he noted.
On the
other hand, the aerospace designer offered a sneak peek at what a ticket-in-hand
space passenger might see. "The very first generation of commercial suborbital
spaceships will be experience-optimized," Rutan added.