Giant leap for UK
spaceflight programme as consultation launches
29 July 2020
The first ever launch into
space from British soil is one step closer today
(29 July 2020) as Transport Secretary Grant
Shapps announces a public consultation on the
regulations for the UK’s spaceflight programme.
The regulations to support
the Space Industry Act 2018 will enable a range
of commercial spaceflight and associated
activities to take place in the UK, including
from any of the 7 proposed spaceports in South
West England, Scotland and Wales, paving the way
for the UK’s first ever space launch.
Government and industry
have set a target to grow the UK’s share of the
global space market to 10% by 2030 with the
government having already awarded grants
totalling nearly £40 million to establish
commercial vertical and horizontal small
satellite launch from UK spaceports.
Today’s consultation is
part of the necessary regulation to enable the
first launches to take place in the early 2020s.
Transport Secretary Grant
Shapps said: “The UK’s space sector can
strengthen our national capabilities, create
high-skilled jobs and drive future economic
growth across the UK. Getting the rules in place
for space launches from UK territory may seem
like one small step. But it paves the way for a
giant leap in the development of our space
sector. This is technology’s high frontier and
we will soon be able to reach it with specialist
small payload launches from British soil.
In parallel to the
development of a new UK Space Strategy, the
government has been engaging with industry and
providing grant funding to stimulate the UK
launch market, and developing international
agreements.”
On 16 June (2020), the UK
and US governments signed the Technology
Safeguards Agreement. This paves the way for US
companies to operate from UK spaceports and
export space launch technology.
Transport Minister Rachel
Maclean said: “The consultation will help to
formalise our national approach to space by
bringing commercial spaceflight to the UK and
creating an environment that fosters growth in
the sector. The steps taken today will join-up
leading technology companies to rural areas
across Great Britain, levelling up local
economies and making them a leader in small
payload space launches.”
Science Minister Amanda
Solloway said: “We want the UK to be the first
place in Europe to launch small satellites and,
in order to do that, we need business-friendly
regulations in place. Satellite launches will
create new jobs right across the UK and attract
significant investment into our rapidly growing
space sector. This consultation brings these
exciting opportunities a big step closer. The
spaceflight regulator role will also be handed
over from the UK Space Agency (UKSA) to the
Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), who will ensure
that spaceflight and associated activities are
carried out safely and responsibly.”
Richard Moriarty, chief
executive of the UK CAA, said: “We welcome the
publication of this important consultation, and
the government’s intention to appoint the UK CAA
as the UK’s regulator for spaceflight, working
closely with the UKSA and other partners. The UK
has the chance to be at the forefront of
spaceflight development globally. We have a long
and proud history of satellite technology and
space research, and the CAA wants to support the
industry to build on these foundations.”