First Standard for Commercial Spaceflight Approved
ASTM International’s commercial spaceflight committee (F47), launched in 2016, has approved its first technical standard. The new guide (F3344) covers fundamental safeguards for storing, using, and handling liquid rocket propellants. The document was developed by the subcommittee on spaceports.
"Our committee has been working diligently to develop industry consensus standards for commercial spaceflight. We are excited for the publication of the first standard within F47, and we look forward to many more in the future," said ASTM International member Jane Kinney, director of business operations at the Commercial Spaceflight Federation.
Specifically, the goal of the new standard is to reduce the explosive hazard of fuels and oxidizers (not monopropellants) to such hazard levels that the use of quantity-distance criteria is not essential to ensure public safety, according to Jane Kinney.
She adds that this standard provides guidance to fill gaps, not replace existing regulation.
In addition to approving the new standard, the committee is working on additional standards covering:
- occupant safety of suborbital vehicles;
- spacecraft types;
- flight controller training;
- reportable safety events; and,
- terminology.
According to Kinney, the committee is seeking involvement from those who work with building codes to develop spaceports, the airport/aviation community, emergency response workers, and others with interest and knowledge that could be beneficial to the commercial spaceflight industry. Become a member at www.astm.org/JOIN. The next meeting of ASTM International committee on commercial spaceflight is Friday, April 12, 2019, in Colorado Springs, Colorado, USA.
For more information on standards for commercial spaceflight, please watch this video.
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