Elon Musk says SpaceX will sue FAA for ‘regulatory overreach’

Elon Musk says SpaceX will sue FAA for ‘regulatory overreach’


SpaceX’s Polaris Dawn Falcon 9 rocket sits on Launch Complex 39A of NASA’s Kennedy Space Center as it is prepared for another attempt to liftoff on September 9, 2024 in Cape Canaveral, Florida. 

Joe Raedle | Getty Images

Elon Musk said SpaceX will sue the Federal Aviation Administration for “regulatory overreach” after the agency planned to fine his defense contractor for issues with two launches last year.

Musk’s threat of litigation, in a post on X on Tuesday, came after the FAA announced it would levy fines amounting to $633,000 against SpaceX because the company had purportedly failed to comply with a variety of licensing and safety-related regulations during those launches.

The FAA said SpaceX used an “unapproved rocket propellant farm” for its EchoStar XXIV Jupiter mission in July 2023. And for its launch a month earlier from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, SpaceX had modified its communication plans and used a new and unapproved launch control room, the FAA said.

According to a “notice of proposed civil penalty,” the FAA clearly informed SpaceX on June 16, 2023, two days before the launch, that the agency “would not issue a modification” to the SpaceX license. SpaceX went ahead anyway.

Musk and a spokesperson for SpaceX didn’t immediately respond to a request for additional information on the focus of the company’s complaint.

Musk also posted comments on X, characterizing the FAA’s latest proposed civil penalties as “lawfare.”

“NASA puts their faith in @SpaceX for all astronaut transport to and from the [International Space Station], but somehow [FAA] leadership thinks they know better,” he wrote in a post to his almost 200 million followers.

The FAA didn’t respond to a request for comment.

In a recent blog post, SpaceX complained about “difficulties launch companies face in the current regulatory environment,” specifically pertaining to “launch and reentry licensing.”

Last year, the FAA said it would fine the company $175,000 for failure to submit required data ahead of a Falcon 9 launch in 2022. SpaceX had paid that fine in full by last October.

In August, the FAA had to scuttle an approved SpaceX Starship Super Heavy environmental review because Musk’s company failed to disclose that it had received multiple enforcement actions from a Texas state and federal environmental authorities.

The FAA’s latest proposed civil penalties highlight the agency’s difficulties obtaining required information from SpaceX in time to review and authorize launches and reentries.

As CNBC previously reported, the federal Environmental Protection Agency and Texas Commission on Environmental Quality found that SpaceX had repeatedly violated the Clean Water Act and failed to obtain proper permits for industrial wastewater discharges at its Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas.

In addition to taking on the FAA and environmental regulators, Musk has clashed with the National Labor Relations Board. He filed a federal lawsuit alleging that the NLRB is unconstitutional in its structure, and that its administrative processes violate the concept of the separation of powers.

WATCH: SpaceX will sue FAA

SpaceX will sue the FAA for regulatory overreach, Elon Musk posts on X



Source

Cloudflare acquires AI data marketplace Human Native
Technology

Cloudflare acquires AI data marketplace Human Native

A logo of CLOUDFLARE sits outside the company’s house on the opening day of the 55th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, January 20, 2025. Yves Herman | Reuters Cloudflare is acquiring artificial intelligence data marketplace Human Native, the company said Thursday, as it expands its push to develop transactions […]

Read More
AI startup Replit launches feature to vibe code mobile apps
Technology

AI startup Replit launches feature to vibe code mobile apps

Thomas Fuller | SOPA Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images AI coding startup Replit is now letting users create and publish mobile apps for Apple devices using only natural language prompts, the latest evolution in so-called vibe-coding. The Mobile Apps on Replit feature, introduced on Thursday, allows creators and small business owners to go from […]

Read More
Spotify hikes U.S. Premium subscription price months after last rate increase
Technology

Spotify hikes U.S. Premium subscription price months after last rate increase

Muhammed Selim Korkutata | Anadolu | Getty Images Spotify Premium subscriptions are getting more expensive. The subscription price will rise from $11.99 per month to $12.99 per month in the U.S., Estonia and Latvia for the February bill, the streaming platform said in a blog post. Users will get an email with the update sometime […]

Read More