
Trump signs order to ease commercial spaceflight regulations
US President Donald Trump signed an executive order on Wednesday that he claimed would ease regulations that govern commercial rocket launches.
The order directs the US transportation secretary to eliminate or expedite environmental reviews for launch licenses given by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA).
"Inefficient permitting processes discourage investment and innovation, limiting the ability of US companies to lead in global space markets," the executive order reads.
It also calls for the cancellation of "outdated, redundant or overly restrictive rules for launch and reentry vehicles," according to a statement released by the White House.
Could the move benefit
Elon Musk
?
Trump's latest executive order also states that "inefficient" permitting processes "discourage investment and innovation," which in turn limits US companies' ability to lead in global space markets.
The move could benefit private space companies such as
SpaceX
, the company owned by former Trump advisor Elon Musk, despite the two falling out publicly in recent months.
The company — which dominates the global private space launches market — plans missions to the Moon and Mars using its Starship rockets, which saw a series of setbackslastly in June as a routine test ended up in an explosion.
Environment groups slam executive order
Environmental groups have criticized Trump's moves to deregulate commercial spaceflight.
by Taboola
by Taboola
Sponsored Links
Sponsored Links
Promoted Links
Promoted Links
You May Like
The boy meets a dog on the street - no one expected what happened next.
Women's Method
Learn More
Undo
"This reckless order puts people and wildlife at risk from private companies launching giant rockets that often explode and wreak devastation on surrounding areas," Jared Margolis of the US-based nonprofit Center for Biological Diversity said in a statement.
The FAA approved an increase in annual
SpaceX Starship
launches from five to 25 in early may, saying it would not negatively affect the environment.
SpaceX boss Musk, the world's richest man, has repeatedly complained that studies over the environmental impact of Starship slow the tests of the rocket, together with post-flight mishap investigations and licensing reviews required by the FAA.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
22 minutes ago
- Business Standard
Ukraine ceasefire still on table as Trump seeks deal, says Rubio
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said the US hasn't ruled out a ceasefire in Ukraine as part of the goal of brokering a peace agreement between Russia and Ukraine, while arguing that additional sanctions would be unlikely to force President Vladimir Putin to accept a deal. While Donald Trump had gone into Friday's summit with Putin seeking a ceasefire, he'd emerged saying he was going to focus on a final settlement. Rubio told NBC's Meet the Press that the US remains committed to crafting a deal that includes both 'what the border lines are going to look like' and Russia accepting that Ukraine 'is a sovereign country.' Rubio sought to outline a path forward after the summit in Alaska without indicating what leverage the US intends to use on either side in the war, which began with Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. Trump told Fox News after the summit that he'd encourage Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to make a deal with Russia. A full peace agreement is 'the best way to end the war now, whether there needs to be a cease fire on the way there,' Rubio said. 'Well, we've advocated for that. Unfortunately, the Russians as of now, have not agreed to that.' European leaders will be joining Zelenskiy at follow-up talks Trump on Monday in Washington, in a show of support as Ukraine's leader faces growing US pressure to agree to a quick peace deal with Russia that involves giving up territory. Rubio said no US sanctions on Russia have been relaxed and the US may eventually end up imposing tougher penalties if talks stall. 'And so those options remain to the president,' he said. 'The minute he takes those steps, all talks stop.' Engaging with Russia is necessary to end the war, 'as distasteful people may find it,' Rubio said. Asked whether a ceasefire is off the table, Rubio said, 'No, it's not off the table.' At the same time, he added, 'Let's be frank, this is not our war.'


NDTV
24 minutes ago
- NDTV
Black Mayors Slam Trump, Highlight Sharp Crime Drop In Cities
As President Donald Trump declared Washington, DC, a crime-ridden wasteland in need of federal intervention this week and threatened similar federal interventions in other Black-led cities, several mayors compared notes. The president's characterisation of their cities contradicts what they began noticing last year: that they were seeing a drop in violent crime after a pandemic-era spike. In some cases, the declines were monumental, due in large part to more youth engagement, gun buyback programs and community partnerships. Now, members of the African American Mayors Association are determined to stop Trump from burying accomplishments that they already felt were overlooked. And they're using the administration's unprecedented law enforcement takeover in the nation's capital as an opportunity to disprove his narrative about some of the country's greatest urban enclaves. "It allows us to say we need to amplify our voices to confront the rhetoric that crime is just running rampant around major US cities. It's just not true," said Van Johnson, mayor of Savannah, Georgia, and president of the African American Mayors Association. "It's not supported by any evidence or statistics whatsoever." After deploying the first of 800 National Guard members to Washington, the Republican president is setting his sights on other cities, including Baltimore, Chicago, Los Angeles and Oakland, California, calling them crime-ridden and "horribly run." One thing they all have in common: They're led by Black mayors. "It was not lost on any member of our organisation that the mayors either were Black or perceived to be Democrats," Johnson said. "And that's unfortunate. For mayors, we play with whoever's on the field." The federal government's actions have heightened some of the mayors' desires to champion the strategies used to help make their cities safer. Trump argued that federal law enforcement had to step in after a prominent employee of the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, was attacked in an attempted carjacking. He also pointed to homeless encampments, graffiti and potholes as evidence of Washington "getting worse." However, statistics published by Washington's Metropolitan Police contradict the president and show violent crime has dropped there since a post-pandemic peak in 2023. Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson scoffed at Trump's remarks, hailing the city's "historic progress driving down homicides by more than 30% and shootings by almost 40% in the last year alone." Mayor Karen Bass of Los Angeles, where homicides fell 14% between 2023 and 2024, called the federal takeover nothing but a performative "power grab." In Baltimore, officials say they have seen historic decreases in homicides and nonfatal shootings this year, and those have been on the decline since 2022, according to the city's public safety data dashboard. Carjackings were down 20% in 2023, and other major crimes fell in 2024. Only burglaries have climbed slightly. The lower crime rates are attributed to tackling violence with a "public health" approach, city officials say. In 2021, under Mayor Brandon Scott, Baltimore created a Comprehensive Violence Prevention Plan that called for more investment in community violence intervention, more services for crime victims and other initiatives. Brandon Scott accused Trump of exploiting crime as a "wedge issue and dog whistle" rather than caring about curbing violence. "He has actively undermined efforts that are making a difference, saving lives in cities across the country, in favour of militarised policing of Black communities," Scott said via email. The Democratic mayor pointed out that the Justice Department has slashed over $1 million in funding this year that would have gone toward community anti-violence measures. He vowed to keep on making headway, regardless. "We will continue to closely work with our regional federal law enforcement agencies, who have been great partners, and will do everything in our power to continue the progress despite the roadblocks this administration attempts to implement," Scott said. Just last week, Oakland officials touted significant decreases in crime in the first half of this year compared with the same period in 2024, including a 21% drop in homicides and a 29% decrease in all violent crime, according to the midyear report by the Major Cities Chiefs Association. Officials credited collaborations with community organisations and crisis response services through the city's Department of Violence Prevention, established in 2017. "These results show that we're on the right track," Mayor Barbara Lee said at a news conference. "We're going to keep building on this progress with the same comprehensive approach that got us here." After Trump gave his assessment of Oakland this week, she rejected it as "fearmongering." Social justice advocates agree that crime has gone down and say Trump is perpetuating exaggerated perceptions that have long plagued Oakland. Nicole Lee, executive director of Urban Peace Movement, an Oakland-based organisation that focuses on empowering communities of colour and young people through initiatives such as leadership training and assistance to victims of gun violence, said much credit for the gains in lower crime rates is due to community groups. "We want to acknowledge all of the hard work that our network of community partners and community organisations have been doing over the past couple of years, coming out of the pandemic to create real community safety," Lee said. "The things we are doing are working." She worries that an intervention by military forces would undermine that progress. "It creates kind of an environment of fear in our community," Lee said. In Washington, agents from multiple federal agencies, National Guard members, and even the United States Park Police have been seen performing law enforcement duties from patrolling the National Mall to questioning people parked illegally. Pentagon press secretary Kingsley Wilson said the guard troops will not be armed but declined to elaborate on their assignments to safety patrols and beautification efforts. Savannah's Johnson said he is all for partnering with the federal government, but troops on city streets is not what he envisioned. Instead, cities need federal assistance for things like multistate investigations and fighting problems such as gun trafficking and cybercrimes. "I'm a former law enforcement officer. There is a different skill set that is used for municipal law enforcement agencies than the military," Johnson said. There has also been speculation that federal intervention could entail curfews for young people. But that would do more harm, Nicole Lee said, disproportionately affecting young people of colour and wrongfully assuming that youths are the main instigators of violence. "If you're a young person, basically you can be cited, criminalised, simply for being outside after certain hours," Lee said. "Not only does that not solve anything regarding violence and crime, it puts young people in the crosshairs of the criminal justice system." For now, Johnson said, the mayors are watching their counterpart in Washington, Muriel Bowser, closely to see how she navigates the unprecedented federal intervention. She has been walking a fine line between critiquing and cooperating since Trump's takeover, but things ramped up Friday when officials sued to try to block the takeover. Johnson praised Bowser for carrying on with dignity and grace. "Black mayors are resilient. We are intrinsically children of struggle," Johnson said. "We learn to adapt quickly, and I believe that we will and we are."


Time of India
37 minutes ago
- Time of India
1st aerial survey by scientists identifies cloudburst-induced debris flow as likely trigger of Dharali flood
Dehradun: The Aug 5 flash flood in Uttarkashi's Dharali was likely triggered by a "cloudburst-induced moraine debris flow along the Kheer Gad stream", as per a five-member multi-institutional team of scientists who spent four days surveying the areas flattened by the deluge. "The debris may have accumulated from a past event, obstructing the stream's course, which then breached catastrophically," said Shantanu Sarkar, director of Uttarakhand Landslide Mitigation and Management Centre (ULMMC), who led the team. The scientists from ULMMC, Geological Survey of India, IIT Roorkee, Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, and the Central Building Research Institute (CBRI) surveyed Dharali and Harsil between Aug 13 and 16. They interviewed locals, ground search teams, and village elders before returning to Dehradun on Saturday. "A key part of the exercise was attempting to reach the glacier site but thick cloud cover prevented us from reaching the glaciated portion directly", said Sarkar. However, the team was the first to conduct an aerial survey of the affected area after the tragedy. He added, "Our chopper ascended to around 8km above Dharali. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Vertical Coffee Roasters Vertical Coffee Roasters Undo We observed the Kheer Gad stream and the debris." Sarkar said that once cloud-free satellite images of the glaciated area are available, the team will finalise its findings in a report which will be submitted to the govt. Debi Prasanna Kanungo, chief scientist at CBRI, added, "Combined rainfall and snowmelt likely triggered the cloudburst-induced glaciofluvial debris flow due to elevated daytime temperatures. Data from Wadia Institute shows around 100mm of rainfall occurred on Aug 4 and 5 in the area. This substantial precipitation, combined with snowmelt runoff, appears to have played a critical role in mobilising the debris. " Based on the aerial survey, the team has ruled out both Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) and Landslide Lake Outburst Flood (LLOF) as causes of the flash flood. "We did not see any fresh active landslide marks for LLOF along the Kheer Gad or depressions that could indicate a glacial lake for GLOF," Kanungo said. The scientists also dismissed the possibility of an ice-rock avalanche. "In the 2021 Rishiganga disaster in Chamoli, debris travelled nearly 25km and carried huge ice and rock pieces. Here, the debris moved just 8km and contained no ice or large rocks. We specifically asked locals and rescue teams about sightings of ice and rock, but they denied it, which rules out the avalanche theory," the team noted. The flash flood not only flattened Dharali and altered the course of the Bhagirathi, but also left behind a trail of destruction that rescue teams are still battling as they repair broken roads, drain temporary lakes, and continue relief operations nearly two weeks after the incident. Stay updated with the latest local news from your city on Times of India (TOI). Check upcoming bank holidays , public holidays , and current gold rates and silver prices in your area.