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US FAA approves license modification for SpaceX Starship Flight 9 Mission

The Federal Aviation Administration approved the SpaceX Starship Flight 9 mission's license modifications on Thursday, but it did not allow it to immediately fly.

The FAA said that SpaceX would not be allowed launch until either the FAA closed its Starship Flight 8 Investigation or made a determination on a return-to-flight,

This approval included SpaceX's ability to increase its number of launches in Boca Chica (Texas) from five to 25. The decision was first announced back in March.

Starship Flight 8 exploded into space in early march, after its engines were cut off and it started spinning uncontrollably. About 240 flights were affected by the incident, and space debris concerns forced more than two dozen planes to divert.

The FAA stated that it was reviewing SpaceX's mishap report submitted on May 14. It also said that it would increase the size of aircraft and maritime hazards areas in the United States as well as other countries to support the Starship Flight 9 flight.

This decision was made after the FAA required SpaceX to revise its Flight Safety Analysis in the wake of the explosion that occurred in March, and because SpaceX intends to reuse an earlier launched Super Heavy booster for the first-time.

It was just over a week after the explosion of the previous test launch that the March incident occurred. Both incidents happened in the early stages of a mission.

SpaceX

Elon Musk's program to accelerate in this year was hampered by the fact that it has been easily surpassed.

Starship 9 will impact air routes stretching 1,600 nautical mile eastwards from Texas to the Straits of Florida. The FAA will shut down the airspace above 6,000 feet. Both Turks and Caicos and the Bahamas are expected to do so. FAA estimates that 175 flights may be affected.

Musk's plan of sending humans to Mars by the end of this decade is centered around SpaceX's 403 foot rocket system. Reporting by Costas Pittas and David Shepardson, Editing by Chris Reese & Kate Mayberry

(source: Reuters)