Thursday, July 2, 2026

A streamlined space licensing process at the FCC

Plus: What went wrong with Starliner
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07/02/2026

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By Jeff Foust


In today's edition: the FCC prepares to vote on streamlined space licensing, the final Atlas 5 launch for Amazon Leo, what went wrong with Starliner 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


The FCC will vote later this month on plans to streamline its space licensing process. The Space Modernization Order, scheduled for a vote by commissioners July 22, would replace the FCC's long-standing Part 25 space and Earth station regulations with a new Part 100, revising rules around processing rounds, license terms, surety bond requirements and other application filing procedures. It would aim to cut red tape and expand the types of minor license modifications operators can make without needing prior FCC authorization, while shrinking the public notice window for typical license requests to 15 days from 30 days, except when longer is required by statute. Pending applications for massive constellations of orbital data center satellites would not be subject to the revised timelines and procedures. The FCC is also due to vote July 22 on rules that would enable the regulator to auction off 160 megahertz of upper C-band spectrum next year in the 3.98-4.14 gigahertz band, mainly used by SES to distribute TV services in the United States. [SpaceNews]


Overconfidence and unrealistic schedules played major factors in the ongoing problems with Boeing's CST-100 Starliner commercial crew vehicle. A report released this week by NASA's inspector general found that NASA was overconfident in Boeing's design for the spacecraft based on its use of heritage hardware, and that overconfidence led to unrealistic timelines that created schedule pressure. The report concluded it was unlikely Starliner will be certified for crewed missions to the International Space Station until at least 2027, limiting its use for crew rotation flights before the station is retired in 2030. In a recent interview, Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg said he was confident Starliner would overcome its problems and enter service. [SpaceNews]


An Atlas 5 lifted off overnight on the last mission for that rocket carrying a satellite payload. An Atlas 5 551 lifted off from Cape Canaveral at 12:30 a.m. Eastern, deploying 29 Amazon Leo satellites into low Earth orbit. The launch was the last of nine Atlas 5 launches Amazon bought in 2021 to begin deployment of its constellation. It was also the last Atlas 5 launch that will deploy satellites; the remaining six Atlas 5 vehicles are reserved for Starliner missions. ULA will continue launching Amazon Leo satellites on its Vulcan rocket, but has not announced when those launches will begin. [SpaceNews]


A technical issue delayed the latest attempt to launch a mission to raise the orbit of a NASA astrophysics spacecraft. NASA said an issue with the Pegasus XL launch vehicle prevented the rocket from being deployed from its L-1011 aircraft during a launch attempt Thursday, after weather called off launches the last two days. NASA did not disclose when the next launch attempt will take place. The rocket is carrying Link, a spacecraft built by Katalyst Space that is designed to attach to NASA's Swift gamma-ray observatory and raise its orbit before Swift reenters in several months. This is the first Pegasus launch in five years and the last flight of the vehicle under contract. [NASA]


Other News


SpaceX launched more Starlink satellites Wednesday night. A Falcon 9 lifted off from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California at 10:57 p.m. Eastern, placing 24 satellites into orbit. The satellites joined more than 1,600 launched in the first half of the year. [Spaceflight Now]


China launched a marine science satellite. A Long March 4B lifted off at 7:46 p.m. Eastern Wednesday from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center. It placed into orbit Haiyang-2E, the latest satellite in a program to study ocean conditions. [Xinhua]


Defense technology company Anduril suffered an explosion at a plant that produces solid rocket motors. The explosion took place last Friday on a test stand at an Anduril factory in Mississippi. There were no injuries, but the extent of the damage was not clear. The company is developing motors there for use in testing prototype motors. The company had planned to start full-scale motor production there a year ago, but sources said that has yet to get underway. [Wired]


ESA has decommissioned a radar-imaging satellite. Sentinel-1A ended operations on Monday, more than 12 years after launch. Controllers will now work to deorbit the satellite. Sentinel-1A, part of the Copernicus Earth observation program, has been replaced by two newer satellites, Sentinel-1C and -1D. [ESA]


If you're looking to really get away from it all, NASA has just the thing. The agency is seeking volunteers for a year-long analog astronaut mission called the Moon and Mars Exploration Analog, in which people will spend a year in simulated habitats at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. The agency has done similar tests before, including an ongoing year-long mission in a simulated Mars habitat. The upcoming test will combine the Mars habitat with another habitat that will simulate a spaceship. The simulated mission is scheduled to begin no earlier than August 2027. [NASA]

Note: FIRST UP will not publish Friday in observance of Independence Day. We will be back on Monday.


FROM SPACENEWS

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Save more than $1,000 on amplifying your company's news: The second half of the year is packed with launches, contracts, partnerships, funding reports, hiring initiatives and industry events. For a limited time, we're offering 50% off our Stellar Dispatch Pro plan, our most popular package for companies that have multiple announcements to share. Use code SDPRO50 to get five press release posts to use over the next 12 months. Sale ends July 10. Claim this promo now.

Good Luck Redeeming Them


"Wow, Administrator Isaacman, I'm sorry, but when I look at this tiny, well-traveled piece of fabric, the first thing that pops to my mind is, frequent flyer miles."


– Amanda Wright Lane, great-grandniece of Wilbur and Orville Wright, after NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman presented to her a piece of fabric from the Wright Flyer that flew on the Artemis 2 mission. She spoke at a ceremony Wednesday rededicating the National Air and Space Museum on its 50th anniversary.


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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Editor's Choice: A slowdown for the first half of the year


Plus: How to solve the launch bottleneck
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07/01/2026

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By Mike Gruss


We're roughly halfway through 2026, and here's a data point that may surprise you: At the current pace, there could be fewer launches this year than in 2025. 


Let’s set a baseline first. I asked Jonathan McDowell, a former astrophysicist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who tracks orbital activity, for some help.


In 2025, he counted 329 launch attempts. That included 198 from the United States (and Rocket Lab New Zealand) and 92 from China.


When McDowell and I traded emails earlier this week, the space industry was on pace for 317 launch attempts for 2026. If it holds, it will be the first time the number of launches drops since 2019.


On one hand, that’s a bit of a surprise. There’s an abundance of optimism around the space industry that’s translated to a lot of money. Seemingly every week the demand for launch becomes clearer. (See: Orbital’s 100,000 satellite constellation of orbital data centers.)


On the other, even casual readers know this has not been a pristine year for launch companies. 


McDowell said he believed SpaceX’s workhorse, the Falcon 9 rocket, “is going at the max rate they can do with the pads they have.” 


Then Starship has faced delays. United Launch Alliance's Vulcan and Blue Origin's New Glenn have been on hold but neither were expected to be high cadence. 


“One might have expected an increase in the Chinese rate, that's the main surprise. They have had some setbacks (Tianlong-3 and a CZ-3B failure) and slow progress on some of the new vehicles,”


Andrew Jones tackled that issue in this week’s China Report newsletter.


China conducted 44 launches across the first six months of the year, nine more than the 35 for the same period last year. China went on to record 92 orbital launch attempts in 2025, with a typically back-loaded second half, meaning the country is well on course for its unofficial goal of more than 100 launch attempts across 2026. This increase has come in part from an uptick in launches for the Qianfan and Guowang megaconstellations, with seven related launches apiece. 


Four new rockets had first flights, with the successful launches of the Kinetica-2 from CAS Space in March and Long March 12B in June. The Tianlong-3 from Space Pioneer failed in April, while the first Ceres-2 solid rocket ended in failure in January, just hours after the loss of a mission due to an anomaly with the venerable Long March 3B. And you won’t have long to wait for the next debut, with the Long March 10B ready and waiting on Hainan island.


There are two takeaways. The first is that there were not quite as many launches for the first half of the year as many folks expected.  


But the second is that it may get increasingly difficult to find a ride. 


Last week, Debra Werner and Emma Gatti dropped this story that had the space community talking.


Nine SpaceX partners and customers tell SpaceNews that SpaceX is not accepting Transporter reservations beyond late 2028 or early 2029, and the manifest for the next couple of years is nearly full. Some customers said they expect that SpaceX will extend Falcon 9 rideshares if its super heavy-lift Starship rocket does not come online as quickly as company leaders anticipate. 


But the lack of spots — potentially as few as half as many as in recent years — has left satellite companies scrambling to find a way to space.


This is the issue to follow in the second half of the year.


FROM SPACENEWS

Save $1,249 on five press release posts on Stellar Dispatch with code SDPRO50 through July 10

Save more than $1,000 on amplifying your company's news: The second half of the year is packed with launches, contracts, partnerships, funding reports, hiring initiatives and industry events. For a limited time, we're offering 50% off our Stellar Dispatch Pro plan, our most popular package for companies that have multiple announcements to share. Use code SDPRO50 to get five press release posts to use over the next 12 months. Sale ends July 10. Claim this promo now.

SIGNIFICANT DIGIT


$8 billion

The value of Iridium as part of a deal announced June 29 in which Rocket Lab will acquire the company for cash and stock.

A Falcon 9 lifts off Nov. 28 on the Transporter-15 rideshare mission with 140 payloads. Credit: SpaceX

MORE OF EVERYTHING


In the July issue of the magazine, Jeff Foust examines four solutions to help solve the launch problems the industry faces. 


They include: more money, more cooperation, more spaceports and more competition. 


The most straightforward solution is to provide more money, particularly for launch infrastructure. Officials have long said that Cape Canaveral Space Force Station and Kennedy Space Center in Florida, along with Vandenberg Space Force Base in California, need as much as several billion dollars in upgrades. Those improvements go beyond the launch sites themselves to roads, power systems and other basic infrastructure.


The latest evidence for those funding needs came in a June 22 report from NASA’s Office of Inspector General. Its study of NASA launch infrastructure at KSC and at Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia found both sites were in danger of reaching launch capacity as soon as 2028 as the number of launches grows.


Subscribers, look out for the new issue to land in your inbox Monday morning. Not a subscriber? Get access today to receive the July issue issue when it drops and all our reporting and analysis.

Trending This Week


Five-month-old startup Orbital has asked the Federal Communications Commission for permission to deploy up to 100,000 data center satellites.


A new study suggests that there may be such a thing as a rocket that is too large.


Boeing will build the U.S. Space Force’s next generation of Mobile User Objective System satellites on its flight-proven 702MP spacecraft platform.


NASA has selected three companies to fly four robotic lunar lander missions worth nearly $600 million as part of its lunar base ambitions, as the agency weighs sending a spare Mars rover to the moon.


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A streamlined space licensing process at the FCC

Plus: What went wrong with Starliner  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌...