Environmentalist Lawsuit Could Delay SpaceX's Starship Launches for Years
The FAA required SpaceX take 75 separate actions to mitigate the environmental impacts of launches from its Boca Chica, Texas, launch site. A new lawsuit says it's not enough.

In the wake of another SpaceX rocket explosion, a coalition of environmental groups and nonprofits have filed a lawsuit against the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) claiming that the agency failed to perform adequate environmental analysis of private space company SpaceX's operations at its Boca Chica, Texas, launch site.
They're demanding that the existing environmental approvals be thrown out and redone, potentially delaying future SpaceX launches for years.
"Federal officials should defend vulnerable wildlife and frontline communities, not give a pass to corporate interests that want to use treasured coastal landscapes as a dumping ground for space waste," said Jared Margolis, a senior attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, one the plaintiffs, in a press release.
The first test launch of the company's Starship vehicle last month saw it make it off the pad only to explode over the Gulf of Mexico. SpaceX CEO Elon Musk says the launch was a qualified success that provided the company with useful data and that they should be ready to launch again within a few weeks, reports CNBC.
The FAA has grounded SpaceX Starship rockets while it conducts a "mishap" investigation, reports Reuters.
The Center for Biodiversity and their co-plaintiffs are demanding significantly more federal scrutiny.
The lawsuit filed by the Center for Biodiversity, the American Bird Conservancy, the Surfrider Foundation, Save RVG, and the Carrizo/Comecrudo Nation of Texas in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia claims that the FAA failed to follow the requirements of the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) before signing off on SpaceX's Starship/Super Heavy launch project in June last year.
NEPA requires that federal agencies study the environmental impacts of the projects they take on, whether that's the decision to fund the widening of a highway or signing off on a new space launch facility.
In June 2022, the FAA released a 40-page environmental assessment of SpaceX's launch program that found no evidence it would have significant impacts provided it adopted 75 mitigation actions.
Ars Technica described a couple of those mitigation actions in an article from last year. SpaceX would have to shield its artificial lights to prevent interference with turtles nesting on nearby beaches, prevent falcons from nesting on site, and hire a biologist to monitor impacts to flora and fauna from its launches and other activities.
To placate humans who might want to vacation in the area, SpaceX also agreed to not launch rockets on various federal and Texas holiday weekends. SpaceX launches require the closure of access roads to public beaches in the area.
There were also more unusual demands made of SpaceX, including that it make annual $5,000 payments to an "adopt-an-ocelot" fund and pay for the installation of placards in the area detailing the local history of the Mexican-American and Civil Wars.
In addition to these mitigation measures, SpaceX also significantly scaled back the planned facilities at its Boca Chica site, reports Ars Technica. It ditched proposals for an on-site fuel manufacturing facility, a desalination plant, and a power plant.
SpaceX's hope was that the reduced footprint of the site would enable the company to avoid a full-blown Environmental Impact Statement (EIS). That's the most severe form of NEPA review. The documents themselves often run hundreds of pages. They take 4.5 years to complete, on average, and run over 600 pages. Some statements for large and complex projects like highways or power transmission lines can take over a decade.
Plaintiffs argue in their lawsuit that the SpaceX Starship launch program is the exact kind of program that requires an EIS, given the launch site's agency to several state parks and wildlife areas and the size of the rockets being fired.
"Permitting SpaceX to launch the largest rockets known to humankind is a type of significant federal action that requires full analysis in an EIS," reads the lawsuit.
The NEPA suit raises a number of impacts that it claims were not sufficiently studied or mitigated in last year's assessment. While SpaceX is limiting its launches on and around particular holidays to reduce necessary road closures, plaintiffs argue that the 500 hours of road closures that the company is still allowed need to be analyzed further.
While SpaceX analyzed the effects of its own greenhouse gas emissions, it failed to address the cumulative harms of rising greenhouse gas emissions for the entire planet as required by NEPA, the lawsuit argues.
The June 2022 environmental assessment required SpaceX to consult with biologists about wildlife impacts after a launch "anomaly" and/or explosion. Plaintiffs are demanding that mitigations to prevent explosions in the first place should be adopted.
That seemingly misses the point of the launches. SpaceX is testing rockets to gather data so that the risk of future explosions can be reduced.
If mitigation measures existed to prevent these problems today, surely the company would have adopted them. SpaceX having to wait years to start launches again while an EIS is created means the company will lose years of data from additional test flights.
It's one example of how environmental review laws, and lawsuits citing them, can impinge on a goal that environmentalists and SpaceX are both seemingly in favor of: fewer SpaceX rockets exploding.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
"NEPA requires that federal agencies study the environmental impacts of the projects they take on . . . "
Ahem: SpaceX is a private company.
Full easy and very simple online money earning job to makes dollars online.from this job i have made $64296 in just 4 months. i just gave this Jobs myspare time after my whole busy day because i am a student and this job changesmy life completely. so simple Jobs no special skills required for this job. getthis by follow instructions on this page.
.
.
HERE ————————————————->> https://Www.Coins71.Com
The EPA asserts that NEPA is so broad that "making decisions on permit applications" counts as a 'project they take on'. The actual text of NEPA, however, seems a lot more limited. The closest I see is
include in every recommendation or report on proposals for legislation and other major Federal actions significantly affecting the quality of the human environment, a detailed statement by the responsible official on ...
But it seems a stretch to call every single regulatory approval a "major Federal action". I think EPA may have overreached - again.
Online, Google paid $45 per hour. Nine months have passed since my close relative last had a job, but in the previous month she earned $10500 by working 8 hours a day from home. Now is the time for everyone to try this job by using this website…
Click the link—↠ http://Www.Smartjob1.com
Gee, it's almost as if someone doesn't want people to have any way of escaping from this shithole planet. /only somewhat joking
Let's note that when Elon Musk wasn't ruffling the wrong feathers, he was able to blow up rockets, toss them into the ocean, and rain their debris all over the country, with little objection. Go watch their own videos showing the long, long road of failures that ultimately led to the industry-changing Falcon Rockets.
He fucked up, and bit the hand that feeds him.
And so we wonder why companies like Twitter and Facebook bend over backwards to support the PC woke schemes of our government overlords. According to folks like Mike and Chemjeff, it's just private actors making free choice in the market....Riiiight.
I wonder if hiring a battalion of assassins would be cheaper than the EIS. "Lawsuit is mooted because all of the plaintiffs had mysterious fatal accidents."
Or planting some horses' heads in some people's beds.
Piano wire and a good strong gallows!
Click bait article is late to the party. Every other organization did these click bait takes a day or two after the press release.
Meanwhile, back here in reality the launch kicked up some sand and dirt from under the mount. There is zero environmental impact from this one-off event.
This is either an attempt at a shakedown, or it is competitors using front groups.
It is highly unlikely to go anywhere. No, the FAA dod not "ground" starship pending this litigation.
That being said.... they could find an activist who has a gavel and use them to gum up the works for a bit.
I live in the Rio Grande Valley in the next county over. There’s a group of activists that basically lawsuits every single thing here, whether it’s a liquified natural gas plant, a windfarm, a launch facility.
My impression is it’s neither shakedown or competitors (although it wouldn’t be surprising if competitors were quietly cooperating or encouraging the activists.) What they are is retirees from the upper Midwest who move down here for the bird watching and year-round golf, and then object to the people already living here having industries and jobs.
Only thing worse than a NIMBY is a carpetbagging NIMBY.
Maybe they could crew the next one with Econazi Schoolteachers instead of fake dummies. The company could stand for Stop People Attempting Capitalist EXcape, and just think of the shuttle jokes we'd be enjoying!
See? Assassins would work!
Why do folks leave Chicago and NYC to get away from high taxes and crime only to start agitating for the same policies which they fled from. Honestly, Southern States sould have a "no vote in State or local elections for 10 years law"...this is consitutitonal as it would not impact Federal voting.
Perhaps if nuisance lawsuits such as these were kicked out of court automatically and the plaintiffs required to compensate the court and defendants for double costs they would be more careful? Not saying I agree with laws requiring environmental impact studies, but when there ARE such laws and defendants complied with them and were granted permission, lawsuits should be denied.
You’re right that SpaceX complied with the government’s requirements. But the lawsuit is against the government, arguing that it didn’t impose strict enough requirements under the NEPA, and arguing that the NEPA required a full environmental impact assessment, rather than the simplified version they conducted.
I don't agree with the lawsuit, but you are misunderstanding it.
Great idea, and make their attorney liable for the costs jointly and severally.
I have a better idea, that Space X argue that the meeting of all federal and state requirements and the disclosure of all possible activities and uses created an estoppel to action with regard to any disclosed conditions.
I do not think that anyone has ever tried that. I believe that it is actually true.
Many Environmentalists are basically Mennonites, without the pacifism.
Rush Limbaugh called them watermelons. Green on the outside, red in the middle.
You can't say "environmentalist" without "mental."
While SpaceX analyzed the effects of its own greenhouse gas emissions, it failed to address the cumulative harms of rising greenhouse gas emissions for the entire planet as required by NEPA, the lawsuit argues.
SpaceX is now responsible for supposed problems other entities are responsible for?
SpaceX is now responsible for supposed problems other entities are responsible for?
Yes.
There were also more unusual demands made of SpaceX, including that it make annual $5,000 payments to an "adopt-an-ocelot" fund and pay for the installation of placards in the area detailing the local history of the Mexican-American and Civil Wars.
Installing the placards are a decent idea but it should be funded by the people who want them.
The plaintiffs should be suing the regulatory agency for not following their own rules in granting permits, not SpaceX for being granted the permits. Just another example the permissive court system ignoring any semblance of legal logic under their purview. My bad! They ARE suing the FAA, not SpaceX. Carry on ...
CO2 is not a pollutant. Anyone who thinks so is an idiot or grifter
YES????
If you have a rocket the size of an office building just launch it.
Wait, wait, wait! I just re-read the title and realized that it doesn't make sense that activities that have already been permitted by the FAA could be delayed by a lawsuit. The demand that the FAA "throw out" permits that have already been granted, relied upon for investment by SpaceX and actually moved forward on for (how many?) years seems very wrong to me, even under the Federal regulatory regime in power. What if they simply said, "No, we're not going to reverse our decision for the current project. We will take your objections into account for any future projects requiring environmental impact assessments in the future."
Wait, wait, wait! I just re-read the title and realized that it doesn’t make sense that activities that have already been permitted by the FAA could be delayed by a lawsuit.
Keystone XL: "First time?"
It was thirty days around the horn
The captain says it's thirty-five more
The moon looks mean the crew ain't staying
There's gonna be some blood
Is what they're all saying
It's a shakedown cruise
And I was just another tool
There ain't no easy way out
They're gonna shake you 'til you shout
They treat you like a dog
But you're only human
You miss your home Lord,
You miss that woman
The captain laughs he says,
"You boys want some sex?"
You can squeeze the sails,
You can lick the decks
It was a shakedown cruise
I guess I just was born to lose
They tell you life is going cheap
I got myself in pretty deep
Star light lost in the night
Drift away and it feels all right
Star light alone in the night
Drift away and it feels all right
I guess it feels all right
The fever's hot, the winds are blowin' cold
The captain's crazy eye puts the fear in your soul
I heard somebody cryin' "Lord let this end
You know I'll never go to sea again"
It was a shakedown cruise
And now we're sendin' out the news
There ain't no victory at sea unless it's mutiny
Now if I don't get off alive
It's just as well I'll be waking up in heaven
'Cause I've been through hell on this shakedown cruise
They call it a shakedown cruise
Shakedown, shakedown cruise
Shakedown, shake it up and move
Shakedown, shakin' in my shoes
Jay Fergeson
Great song...fall of 1979 if I recall.
The East German Econazis are really asking for a Berlin Wall englobing the entire planet, so no one here get's out alive.
Nuke the NIMBYs!
Nuke the unborn baby whales for Jesus!
Musk is both a hoarder and a wrecker.
"...There were also more unusual demands made of SpaceX, including that it make annual $5,000 payments to an "adopt-an-ocelot" fund and pay for the installation of placards in the area detailing the local history of the Mexican-American and Civil Wars..."
Sounds like a R&R band's contract stipulation - 'only yellow M&Ms 9n the bowl'.
New rule: if you file a lawsuit and lose, you owe all the financial and other penalties you were hoping to impose.
Or you get to ride the next test rocket. Your choice.
As-if it was any secret that [Na]tional So[zi]alists hated private business.
Those greedy bastards are causing the sky to fall down! /s
If they force the review it would be likely be quicker to shut it down and move to Florida
The point of the lawsuit is to end the launches, thereby negating the need for any data gathered. Luddites.
Yet the environmental damage in American Empire Wars in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen and so on are exponentially higher than a few launches from the poorest area of Texas and not a peep. Hell what US weapons and UK depleted uranium are doing in Ukraine is again a factor of 10 ^10 worse. Not a peep.
Let's be honest about this.. Musk is enemy number one because he bought Twitter and is agains pedos and sexually muliating kids. That is what is going on here. Most environmentalists don't have hard science or engineering degrees and many are degenerates screaming for attention and wanting to hurt normal folks because they failed in the real world.
Musk should just take Starbase and go to Mexico who would welcome him with open arms.
Google is by and by paying $27485 to $29658 consistently for taking a shot at the web from home. I have joined this action 2 months back and I have earned $31547 in my first month from this action. I can say my life is improved completely! Take a gander at it what I do.....
For more detail visit the given link..........>>> http://Www.jobsrevenue.com