Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Editor’s Choice: FAA announces commercial space toll

Plus: Pausing (and charging for) TraCSS
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04/29/2026

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By Dan Robitzski


Is the highway to space about to become a toll road? The Federal Aviation Administration plans to begin collecting fees from commercial space companies for their launches and reentries.


The logic is that imposing a fee on commercial operators — 25 cents per pound of payload, capped at $30,000 per launch or reentry — would be a pittance for companies already spending millions on space operations. But it would add up to significant revenue for the FAA’s Office of Commercial Space Transportation (AST), which would be able to make up for annual budget decreases without needing to take that money from taxpayer coffers. That money, which could total $1 million per year from Starlink launches alone, would then allow AST to improve integration of launches and reentries into the national airspace system directed by an FAA reauthorization act in 2024. Just think of it as paying a highway toll under the assumption that it helps the traffic lights keep working.


The fees have been in the works for a long time, and will be retroactively applied to all launches in 2026. But sticking points remain. For example, the fees per pound of payload are set to increase year over year. And the launch industry (namely SpaceX, which would inevitably pay more in fees than any other operator due to the frequency of its launches) has a long history of butting heads with the FAA over licensing and other regulatory issues.


One reason for the change, alleviating taxpayer burden, is an unexpected talking point given the role various government agencies play as space industry anchor customers. The White House proposed giving the Space Force 71.2 billion taxpayer dollars in 2027, more than doubling its budget. Last week alone, the Space Systems Command, the Space Force’s acquisition arm, awarded SpaceX a $57 million contract to demonstrate intersatellite communications technology. SpaceX was also one of 12 companies included in the Space Force’s $3.2 billion award to develop Golden Dome interceptor prototypes. 


In this case, maybe it’s better to think of companies pitching in to improve a government service, one  that helps space travel run smoothly, as  more of a rebate program. It may also be one that’s simply the price of doing business off-world.


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PAUSING (AND CHARGING FOR) TraCSS


The Commerce Department may soon pause its Traffic Coordination System for Space (TraCSS), a prototype service it’s been developing to provide space safety information free of charge. TraCSS has had a turbulent time, with funding in jeopardy since the White House’s 2026 budget proposal sought to cancel the program. In recent months, the TraCSS team, too, has been considering imposing user fees — an option that seems increasingly likely while the Commerce Department develops a “new operating and financial structure” during the potential pause.


“There’s a lot of different options on the table,” said Taylor Jordan, director of the Office of Space Commerce, said at the Goddard Space Science Symposium in March. “We’re not dead set on applying some type of user-fee construct to [Space Policy Directive]-3 for these systems, but it gives us the flexibility to have those conversations.”


Those fees have prompted serious debate, some of which has been published on SpaceNews, about which space services should be free for the sake of the greater good, and how to balance the worldwide need for space safety info with the need to somehow pay for those services.

Trending This Week


Overview Energy, a startup developing space-based solar power systems, announced an agreement to provide energy for data centers operated by Meta. Overview will transmit up to one gigawatt of power when other sources of energy, like terrestrial solar power, are unavailable.


Tensor is aiming to supply a component that could become critical to the Pentagon’s missile-defense architecture in space: compact radios capable of rapidly moving targeting data between satellites and interceptors.


A spent Falcon 9 stage used to launch a pair of commercial lunar landers is projected to crash on to the moon Aug. 5, according to astronomers. It’s the first time something like this has happened since 2022.


A manufacturing issue involving a European company has resulted in corrosion in modules produced for both the lunar Gateway and Axiom Space’s commercial space station.


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Tracking targets from orbit

Plus: Elon Musk's compensation goals
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04/29/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In today's edition: appropriators criticize a "disappointing" NASA budget proposal, Space Force moves into tracking moving targets from orbit, Elon Musk's unusual SpaceX compensation goals and more. 


If someone forwarded you this edition, sign up to receive it in your inbox every weekday. Have thoughts or feedback? You can hit reply to let me know.


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Top Stories


House and Senate appropriators criticized NASA's budget proposal, saying it does not give the agency the resources it needs to carry out its missions. At hearings Monday by the House Appropriations Committee's commerce, justice and science (CJS) subcommittee and Tuesday by its Senate counterpart, members from both parties said the $18.8 billion budget proposal was insufficient, calling it "disappointing" and "abysmal." They reiterated concerns about cuts in areas ranging from science to NASA's education office. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman defended the request, saying it provided sufficient funding for priorities such as exploration. The House CJS appropriations subcommittee is scheduled to mark up its spending bill Thursday, while Sen. Jerry Moran (R-Kan.), chairman of the Senate CJS appropriations subcommittee, said his committee would use last year's spending bill, rather than the administration's proposal, as a guide for its 2027 spending bill. [SpaceNews]


The Pentagon's fiscal 2027 budget request is the clearest signal yet that the U.S. Space Force is moving into a new role of tracking moving targets from space. The proposal allocates more than $8 billion for so-called moving target indicator, or MTI, systems, which are satellites designed to follow objects on the ground and in the air in near real time. Such tracking has traditionally been done by specialized aircraft, but the Space Force says such aircraft face threats that make them "increasingly unviable."  The MTI mission is split into two parts, one tracking moving targets on the ground and other tracking aircraft and cruise missiles. The latter is more difficult, but Air Force Secretary Troy Meink said earlier this month at the Space Symposium that it is "technically feasible and grounded in demonstrated technologies." [SpaceNews]


BAE Systems won a Space Force contract to demonstrate an intersatellite communications technology planned for Golden Dome. The $11.8 million contract awarded Tuesday will test Link-182, a radio-frequency data link standard adopted for the Space Force's planned MILNET data relay network supporting the Golden Dome missile defense shield. SpaceX won a $57 million awarded earlier this month for a similar demonstration of intersatellite communications using Link-182. [SpaceNews]


Silicon Valley startup EraDrive is working with Northrop Grumman to enhance spacecraft autonomy with artificial intelligence. The companies announced a teaming agreement to collaborate on using AI in robotic missions, including in-orbit operations and supporting activities on the ground. One example of that work would be incorporating AI into inspection and servicing of spacecraft, assisting the Mission Robotic Vehicle spacecraft by Northrop subsidiary SpaceLogistics. [SpaceNews]


Other News


Elon Musk's compensation as SpaceX CEO is tied to goals involving orbital data centers and Mars settlement. According to a compensation plan outlined in SpaceX's still-confidential registration statement for his IPO, Musk would receive 200 million "super-voting restricted shares" in the company if SpaceX achieves a market value of $7.5 trillion and established a settlement on Mars with at least one million people. He would get 60.4 million in such shares if the company operates an orbital data center constellation with 100 terawatts of computing capacity. The compensation package does not include deadlines for achieving those milestones. [Reuters]


A California commission has apologized to SpaceX as part of a lawsuit settlement. SpaceX sued the California Coastal Commission after it voted in 2024 against an increase in launches from Vandenberg Space Force Base, with the company claiming the commission's move was political discrimination for Musk's views. As part of a settlement filed Tuesday in federal court, the commission issued a letter of apology for that vote and agreed it can't block proposals by the Space Force to allow increased launches from Vandenberg. The commission, though, said it remained concerned about environmental impacts from increased launch activity. [Courthouse News Service]


A SpaceX team has won the first Neil Armstrong Space Prize from Purdue University. The university announced last week it selected a team of five from SpaceX who led development of landing and reuse of Falcon 9 boosters for the prize, intended to recognize achievements in space discovery and innovation. The SpaceX team will formally receive the prize at an event in Washington in September. [Purdue Univ.]


The Artemis 2 astronauts will be visiting the White House today. The astronauts are scheduled to meet with President Trump in the Oval Office this afternoon, according to a White House schedule. Trump invited the crew to the White House when speaking to them during the mission earlier this month. The visit comes as the White House budget proposal for NASA would emphasize exploration, including an accelerated pace of future Artemis missions, while cutting other parts of the agency. [Washington Post]


FROM SPACENEWS

Reach more than 2,000 smallsat professionals in our daily show editions published during SmallSat Europe in Amsterdam from May 26 to 28.

Be part of the conversation at Amsterdam: Reach attendees via our first-ever conference dailies outside the United States. Our SmallSat Europe editions offer high-visibility that helps you reach defense, security and commercial smallsat decisionmakers. Book your ad, press release or sponsored content today – premium positions are still available. Start a conversation with our team.

Government's Problem


"You didn't go running around from every cable TV station, going, 'Look at me, look at me, I did this, I did this.' You pointed to your team. We need more like you in government. We've got too many buttheads."


– Sen. John Kennedy (R-La.), congratulating NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman for the Artemis 2 mission during a hearing Tuesday by the Senate Appropriations Committee's CJS subcommittee.


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Editor’s Choice: FAA announces commercial space toll

Plus: Pausing (and charging for) TraCSS  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ...