Time is running out’
for UK Government to translate space launch
ambitions into reality
14 July 2023
In a report published the
Commons’ Science, Innovation, and Technology
Committee says “there is now not a moment to lose”
if the UK is to realise the full potential of the
“extraordinary” space launch sector, which is
booming worldwide.
Read all publications related
to this inquiry, including oral and written evidence
The UK is on the cusp of
establishing Europe’s first small satellite orbital
launch capability. As well as offering services to
one of the world’s fastest growing industries, a UK
satellite launch sector can help strengthen
Britain’s position in the design and manufacture of
small satellites, and in provision of data and
analytical services. However,
Britain’s first attempt at satellite launch—the
Virgin Orbit horizontal launch from Spaceport
Cornwall at Newquay on 9 January 2023—did not
succeed. The LauncherOne rocket did not reach the
required orbit and its payload of small satellites
was lost.
Virgin Orbit and some of its
satellite customers were highly critical of the UK
regulatory process which preceded the launch
attempt. This process was led by the Civil Aviation
Authority (CAA), who were accused by Virgin Orbit of
operating a process that was slow, excessively
bureaucratic, and risk averse.
The Committee concludes there
was no evidence that the regulatory system
contributed to the failure of the Virgin Orbit
launch and accepts that the CAA has made progress in
its application of the regulations.
But there is insufficient
coordination between the large number of regulatory
bodies involved in licensing launches, and this
continues to place unnecessary burdens of complexity
and administration on companies—many of them
small—in the launch sector. The Committee calls on
Government to convene all relevant bodies without
delay to take steps now to improve the licensing
system of UK satellite launch, and to examine
whether regulations in the Space Industry Act 2018—
passed by Parliament in anticipation of the
launch—need amendment in the light of experience in
practice.
The Government is implementing
some of the recommendations of SITC’s November 2022
report “UK space strategy and UK satellite
infrastructure”. But the Government’s response on
the need for more effective co-ordination across
government of space and satellite policy,
implementation and leadership was not satisfactory.
The National Space Council was abolished and then
re-announced as an Inter-Ministerial Group but is
yet to meet for the first time, and its
responsibilities are unclear. The establishment of
the Space Sector Industry Forum provides an
opportunity for the Government to take advice from
the sector and a leader should be appointed without
delay.
The vital UK Position,
Navigation and Timing (PNT) strategy, which has been
in draft form since as long ago as June 2021, should
be published without delay. The Committee was told
by the Minister with responsibility for Space on 17
May 2023 that it was expected in weeks.
Chair's comment
Rt Hon Greg Clark MP, Chair of
the Science, Innovation & Technology Committee,
said:
“The UK has huge opportunities
in the burgeoning space and satellite industry. But
the sector is global and fast-paced, and to maintain
our position the UK must act urgently to applies the
lessons of the Cornwall disappointment to the
regulatory system for satellite launch.”
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