Welcome the Senior Vice President of seatac at the us chamber of commerce. Good morning great to be here, great to see you. I want to thank christian and his team for organizing such an excellent program. I have enjoyed working with christian on a number of important issues to seatac and our Member Companies but at seatac the Chamber TechnologyEngagement Center we are working to establish a National Data privacy standard that protects allamericans equally and promote policies that enable emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, Automated Vehicles and Unmanned Aircraft to thrive. Our goal is to see a workforce that is skilled and prepared for the digital economy. A Common Thread running through our work is the issue of data. Without a thriving Martin Communications network none of this is possible and that is why i am happy to be here today to introduce chairman ajit pai. He is the son of immigrants the rose through Harvard University and the university of chicago law school. He has worked at the department of justice, he has worked in the private sector and was first appointed to the fcc by president obama and later was appointed by donald trump to be chairman. Under ajit pais leadership he has worked diligently to remove regulatory barriers and streamlined permitting for communications technology, 5g and wireline broadband. I am very appreciative of his leadership to ensure that all americans are connected and benefiting from the digital economy. Please join me in welcoming ajit pai. Thank you so much for that kind introduction and good morning to all of you at the us chamber of commerce, Second Annual space policy summit. It is my second business to the chamber this year to discuss the space economy. You might member in july i was here for a roundtable on a small satellite where i discussed how the sec is promoting American Innovation and investment in space but the fact that you had me back suggests my presentation couldnt have been that bad and that is good news. Many of you have already heard my favorite star trek quote. The final star wars movie comes out this month and i think star wars offers a useful Reference Point for todays discussion. The thing about our culture, it is the most profitable franchising movie history, generating 68 billion of revenue since 1977 but consider the global space economy generates 350 billion of revenue each year and some analysts project the number could grow to 3 trillion annually in 30 years. Everybody on twitter might be talking about baby yoda but the space industry, perhaps not as adorable, is a bigger deal economically. Enormous potential for future growth and why is that . Is a quick example that gets to the answer. Across the country, farmers and ranchers are using connected technologies to reduce waste, improve sustainability and increase yields all to the benefit of American Consumers. Many companies are deploying machine to Machine Technology and internet of Things Technology in rural environments to analyze data in realtime, improving operational efficiency. The fcc established Precision Agriculture Task force to promote these trends to enhance productivity in the nations forms and ranchers. This Task Force Includes a representative of the satellite industry because these advances are being powered in part by tremendous growth and innovation. For the longest time costeffective technology is needed to support precision agriculture largely restricted to the geographic footprint of cellular networks. That is changing and changing fast. To provide nongeostationary mobile Satellite Service for 150 small satellites in low earth orbit. The satellite connectivity will enable farmers to have sensors where there is no cell coverage. Supporting new precision agriculture applications. We have entered an era in which innovation is changing how our farmers are here on earth. All across our economy, we increasingly see Satellite Services integrated with other technologies. Consider 5g, the next generation of wireless communications. In the past integrating satellite technologies with prevailing standards like 4gl the happen after the facts. 5g will offer a Common Network architecture that is accessible to a broader range of Technology IncludingSatellite Services. Rather than playing catchup Satellite Services will be 5g from the getgo. Many expect 5g to unlock advances in automated cars, thanks to Satellite Technology and ability to multicast and reduce congestion by offloading nontime sensitive traffic from terrestrial facilities which is on demand video streaming and Software Updates that can be distributed to millions of cars simultaneously. We have been doing our part to help our nation and this industry sees the opportunity of the new spaceage, 1. 6 million foot view we see an industry that is changing quickly in space and we are trying to make sure our regulations change with it. A byzantine licensing and Regulatory Approval system could be bottlenecked, it hurts consumers and innovators alike and that makes a difference because now a satellite can be built in a matter of months or weeks or days and launched by a private provider on demand. That is why under my leadership the sec is committed to matching the tempo of the industry we regulate. Our space agenda involves cutting red tape and giving green lights. One area where weve been particularly active his promotion of new and expanded Services Using new nongeostationary satellites. Instead of sending one bird in high orbit we can send a bunch of them into low or mid earth orbit and these constellations will create a mesh network of satellites in space that hold potential to provide consumerfocused Residential Broadband at a speed and price point comparable to our terrestrial competitors. Of course, we cannot and will not endorse any one particular business plan. What we are doing is giving every company a fair shot at innovating and competing in the american marketplace and that is why weve approved a number of applications for the new generation of low earth orbit satellite constellations. Companies like one win and space x launched their first groups of low earth orbit satellites and our hope is you open the doors to innovation, Many Companies will figure out a way to make it work both technically and economically. The sec has seen an increase in applications for low earth orbit satellites proposing earth imaging services. Aspire and planet are two examples of companies licensed to compete in the earth observation industry. These rapidly growing space enabled services are revolutionizing the oil industry, agriculture and Disaster Relief among other disparate sectors. Were also excited about the possibilities of small satellite, short duration small satellite systems have myriad uses including scientific and Research Missions as well as communications and remotesensing but despite these advances, as of this summer the Commission Still required small satellites which had minimal mass and short orbital lifetimes, to go through the same regulatory hoops as larger heavier satellites that may stay in low earth orbit for many years. To fix his regular tory mismatch i previewed during my last visit to the chamber the sec adopted a new separate streamlined licensing procedure for small satellites and this new process enable small satellite applicants to choose a streamlined alternative to the existing licensing procedure. This streamlined process features among other things, and easier application process, lower application fee and a shorter timeline for review. It also offers potential radiofrequency interference protection for Critical Communications links. To this point ive talked about all the ways the commission is making it easier to reduce satellite in orbit but this does raise a legitimate risk of increased orbital debris. In space, as you have probably heard this morning, even a centimeter wide object can wreak devastating damage and that is why under my leadership the commission is currently undertaking its First Comprehensive review of our orbital debris rules since they were adopted a decade and a half ago. Our aim is to improve and clarify these 2004 rules based on improvements in mitigation practices and also to address recent market developments. I would not that our new application process for small satellites also promote most orbital debris mitigation. In order to qualify for our streamlined process, small sats must be able to burn up completely in the earths atmosphere if something goes wrong and ground operators lose contact. Turning to another trend, increasingly American Consumers want and expect to be connected wherever they are, which is typically on the move. This is opening new Market Opportunities with connected vehicles that are on land, on sea and in the air. That is why the sec has made it easier for satellites to target earth stations in motion, improving the transition of data to moving vehicles like ships or airplanes or school buses. I saw a great example of this in person during a trip i did out west last year. I was in uth doing a in a videoconference with the superintendent of the Kane County School district in the southern part of the state of utah and we discussed how kids from remote and Rural Regions can have long, often multihour bus rides to and from school or sporting events and during these long trips many kids would like to do their homework surprisingly, take a test over email and use all the other internetconnected tools that other kids in the United States have at their disposal, and many others are on the go in Rural America and that is something the sec is looking to encourage. The sec has been working to boost Satellite Service from which many of us are familiar which is gps. Last year the Commission Voted to allow american devices to access the european Global Navigation satellite system known as galileo enabling the galileo system to work in concert with the us gps constellation should make gps more precise, more reliable, more resilient, a been to consumers and businesses alike. On top of the commissions efforts i want to highlight recent gains by the us delegation last months Communications Conference in egypt. This event comes every four years, so you can think of it as spectrum olympics as it were. I was honored to be part of the us delegation and to work with International Leaders from around the world to help create a flexible Regulatory Framework that allows for continued growth of a multibilliondollar global industry. The majority of the conferences agenda was based on satellite issues. When when i spoke to the chamber in july i closed by talking about the upcoming 50th anniversary of the moon landing and since that went so well, i thought i would close my remarks today by going back to the60s yet again. When we think of the space race we often think of legendary astronauts, neil armstrong, buzz aldrin and john glenn. What many people forget is they were part of a a larger story. When i became chairman i had the privilege to meet newton minnow, the chairman of the fcc during the early part of the Kennedy Administration here to me the most interesting part of our conversation was his description have the fcc when he was chair helped to spur the beginning of the u. S. Commercial space industry. The chairman famously believed putting satellites into space was more important and putting a human being into space. Ashe put it, satellites are more important than sending a man into space because they will launch ideas and ideas will last longer than men and women. Thats the way i see it from the 21st century. We are setting the stage for a new space age. Theres no telling what kind of innovation can be realized for the benefit of american and, indeed, Global Consumers if we put in place the right policies. I look forward to working with you to do that and to help companies here and around the world seize the opportunities presented by this different too. Thank you again for your attention and i look forward to an engaging conversation to come. Caleb henry from space news. Two questions. First about the orbital debris mitigation. Do you have any sense of when there might be movement on that or a ruling . On that, we continue to consult with our federal partners. I dont have an update at this time but i can tell you our team at the sec is actively engaged in the issue and as i mentioned in my remarks we take this particular issue as an important component of our overall space agenda. We want to make sure the environment in space is safe not just for innovation but safe in terms of the amount of debris that could be resulting from all of these lunches. We are very committed to the issue as are our federal partners. It seems the sec has moved from leaning toward a private auction to announcing just last month a public auction. Can you explain why that change happen . I have never made any pronouncement other than the one i made about the weight we were going to proceed and i was a consistent we had four policies four values, we wanted to uphold in this proceeding. Number one, a substantial amount spectrum for 5g, number two, doings as quickly as possible, number three, chewing the federal government receives revenue and number four, ensuring the continued delivery of services that are currently delivered using the cband spectrum. I can sisley sent all the auction on the table c band spectrum. Im confident the way weve gone forward is one that would best capture the synergy of those four values. Chairman, thanks to coming. Im from the commercial Space Flight Federation and i would see been alone for the moment so youre the one. How do you balance licensing more small satellites via constellations and the calls for basically overcrowding and space junk, how do you balance the two . On one hand, as i mentioned, we want to make sure with a framework in place that allows any Innovative Company come in innovative idea to compete in the marketplace. We want every company to have a fair chance to succeed. On the other hand, as i mentioned in my response to mr. Henry, we want to make sure the space environment is a safe one especially because the costs of debris and other harms in space could last much longer than he would hear on the earth. One of the things were trying to strive for is to make sure we have in place the policies that encourage both of those values. Mention all the things we doing and encouraging launches but debris is an important policy for us as his work with all of the stakeholders to make sure we give everyone a fair chance to succeed. Even beyond the orbital debris rules. That balance is difficult to strike but thankfully we have a lot of good step at the fcc, federal partners committed to working with us and in my experience with private stakeholders willing to come to the table in good faith with constructive suggestions as opposed to zero sum solutions, and that allows us to hopefully thread the needle and deliver value for consumers both in the short and the long term. A question, a philosophical thinker in the terrestrial, in some terrestrial use cases for spectrum contention between say navy ships afloat coming into ports and a dynamic allocation of spectrum, a dynamic one, and that seems to be a good solution where people can coexist, do you see that dynamic allocation applying to l. E. O. And what might that look like . How would we dynamically allocate spectrum for l. E. O. . I would have to think a little more carefully about the implications of migrating that framework to leo but what i can say is for example with respect to the cbrs band where we did explore the type of sharing arrangement we feel that is the best of both worlds. We been able to accommodate somebody incumbents using things like environmental sensing capability of the spectrum Access Systems to be able to manage, to make sure it incumbent are protected when they need access to the spectrum but also create a substantial amount of spectrum across a huge part of the country where priority access licenses be appealing or if they are not, then general access licenses would be available especially licensed by rule basis. I have to think carefully about the implications but if think the model weve established in cbrs has been a productive one and were always looking forward to Innovative Solutions like that and if theres an application in l. E. O. Wed love to see engineering analysis that might help us move forward. Solved the world problems, all right. Anybody else likes all right. Well, as one of my favorite political philosophers George Costanza once said, leave on a high note. Thank you very much. Appreciate it. Now, the honorable Steve Stephen dickson, administrator of the federal aviation administration. Hi, everybody. Its great to be here representing the faa at the chamber of commerce space summit, and i think the title of event this year, launch the space economy, is very apropos for me about three months on the job because sometimes in the last several weeks ive felt like ive been sitting at the top of a rocket myself as ive been around the world dealing with some very important issues to our country and to our industry. But it really has been an exhilarating and a fascinating ride. For example, i just came back from the dubai airshow where i met officials from the dubaibased Mohammed Bin Rashid Space Center which builds and operates earth observation satellites. The center is part of the broader uae space agency, and the uae, as you know is an important Strategic Partner of United States thats an energetic new participant in human spaceflight, having sent their first astronaut to the International Space station late september for an eightday mission. And next year they plan to watch a probe to mars. Their longrange goal they say is to eventually colonize the red planet. Im all into stretch goals but that is a stretch goal if i ever heard one. If thats not proof of a vibrant and expanding aerospace industry, im not sure what is. Developments like that strengthen my resolve to unleash the power of commercial space transportation by paving the way for easier access to lowearth orbit the National Airspace system, and doing so safely and efficiently. The faa has maximum support for doing this work. Its a mission that is front and center for the trump administration, and my boss, the secretary of transportation elaine chao. Last year as you know President Trump assigned space policy directed two which calls on the faa to streamline the rules for commercial launch and reentry while at the same time protecting National Security and public safety. The idea in part is that was the conference of the private sector to invest in commercial space. Those investments as you know are substantial and already growing at a fast pace. According to the National Space council, the first half of 2019 we saw almost as much investment in Space Companies as we did in all of 2018. Over the past decade we weve seen a total of nearly 25 billion invested in about 500 Space Companies, most of which are american. What all those dollars are fueling our commercial ventures that could be right out from a Science Fiction book, space travel and tourism, that led servicing, horrible debris removal, and space manufacturing, and huge constellations of miniature satellites for Global Internet connectivity, and other services. Services. Im sure there are many more bright ideas and innovations in the minds of the entrepreneurs out there. Lets face it, this isnt just about commerce. All this innovation is exciting for americas youth in the same way that the Apollo Program was on the and many others when i was a kid a few years ago. Just seeing if youre paying attention. It was more than a few years ago obviously. For example, the dubai airshow two weeks ago i met apollo 15 command module pilot who was one of my dad west point classmates, class of 1955. And as i was speaking with out i i was reminded how the program was the driving force behind the generation of engineers, scientists and pilots, myself among them. Three of our biggest commercial space innovators, jeff bezos, elon musk and richard branson, say that the Apollo Missions lit the fuse that led to their becoming space entrepreneurs. Our visions of launching beyond the Wild Blue Yonder into space at that time were based on a black and white rca tv and baritone voice anchormen like walter cronkite. Today, right from their high depth smartphones, todays kids see the dashboard camera from a roadster that elon musk launched atop his rocket and put in orbit around the sun. On social media, they see 260foot tall space x rocket boosters sticking the landing after delivering upward statist orbit. They see beth moses as the first woman to make a commercial spaceflight. And they see the massive straddle launcher, the Worlds Largest aircraft taking to the skies on its first flight in preparation for dropping boosters at altitude for what they call Airline Style access to space. And while we could only imagine would be like to go to space one day, todays youth can save that money to buy a ride on a suborbital excursion which may one day in the nottoodistant future zoom them across the world in about 30 minutes. Or better yet, from my perspective as a potential employer that can take part in creating a launching an experiment as early as fifthgrade, i think such realtime exposure and engagement early on will pay off some day for the whole new generation of scientists and aerospace engineers. For the faas park modernizing the way we regulate and license commercial Space Operations will allow all this to be done more affordably and efficiently while keeping the focus on our northstar which of course is safety. Its a tall order but we have to succeed or we will be left behind. The faa learned the hard way with the Unmanned Aircraft revolution that innovation and technology waited for no one. In that case an entirely new industry sprang up practically overnight and we really were not ready for it. Im happy to say the agency has changed course and does come a a long way toward getting caught up on uas but we are determined not to let it happen again other new entrants commercial space chief among them. So what can we do . To start with we do the crucial work the administration and the department of transportation have asked us to do. We rework our larger reentry licensing regime to streamline regulations for licensing commercial space transportation activities, and we work to more efficiently integrate realtime launch operations with ongoing aviation operations in our world leaving an extremely safe National Airspace system. Eventually, we envision commercial space will have a modern set of flexible Performance Space regulations that parallel commercial aviation with vehicle and crew certifications as well as operational approvals, installation of Safety Management systems and the associated just culture reporting methodologies. But as you know given the fragile nature of such a nascent industry the congress in 2004 impose a regulations moratorium on commercial human spaceflight thats been extended several times over the years and now continues through 2023. As it is, the faa still has amended to protect the public on the ground and aircraft from the service of 60,000 feet. For the the public on the ground we do this through launch reentry and space port regulations. For aircraft deconfliction we do it through some less than efficient means currently at r. Kelly more about about that in a minute. A regulations require us to license each commercial launch in the u. S. Or launches conducted by u. S. Companies anywhere in the world. Each license requires the applicant is that a system safety analysis and a Ground Safety analysis, detailed documents that prove to the faa that the intended launch or reentry will not pose an undue threat to the public. While this way of doing business work well for a few commercial launches a year, the way it used to be, that pace has picked up to the point where it is quickly becoming impractical. In 2018, the faa issued a record 35 launch and reentry licenses. The total this year is expected to be similar but for 2020 we are on tap for almost one the week for 52 license activities and theres reason to believe these numbers will climb. There are currently 11 license space force in eight states around the United States, many in nontraditional locations you might not think about like new mexico, oklahoma and colorado, and ample more in the pipeline. Our licensing requirements notice of proposed rulemaking is the first step of modernizing access to space. The goal as a thank you heard this morning is to simplify the licensing process, enable novel operations and reduce costs. One example, the rules would allow companies to use a a single faa licensed from multiple launches from multiple large sites. We closed the Public Comment period on the nprm in august receiving 154 submissions, many submissions, many of which included very detailed and well thought out comments from industry. Our commercial space team is carefully reviewing all the input and working towards publishing a final rule in the fall of 2020. One area where the faa can make significant progress now in making launches more efficient from overall commerce standpoint without new regulation is moving to dynamic deconfliction space vehicles and commercial airliners using shared data. Today, the faa uses a very crude manual process to close off relatively large swaths of airspace around launch and Reentry Court orders for long times. Theres no operational realtime surveillance and communication between the launch providers and faa air Traffic Controllers. Considering the growing number of launches these impacts will only increase in the Current System is not sustainable. The faa recognizes this issue and we are working on solutions. Our space data integrator or sti concept is key to providing relief that we cant have a prototype which we developed in part with data that space x and blue origin provided from their launches that automates the current manual process of transmitting realtime launch and reentry data from the commercial launch provider to the faas joint Space Operations group and air traffic managers. As an aside i do chance to view this operation myself out at the faa command center in northern virginia, outside of d. C. Here in my first week of the job. Analysts review the information and determine how to modify aircraft hazard areas to reduce the impact of flights in the area. This is the first step in a phased approach to get to the end goal which is realtime dynamic launch and reentry information that will allow for dynamic rerouting information, automatically sent to air Traffic Controllers and eventually directly to the flight deck, which is an important capability especially in large continual situation with dynamic rerouting we can close and open airspace faster and more efficiently while keeping safety as our top priority. The faas Program Management organization is carly working to operationalize the first stage of sdi, the piece that takes an realtime quality data from the launch providers within the next two years. The next step will be getting information integrate into the controller systems so they can see it on the scopes and finally to pilots. You can see from the tempo and diversity and launch operations that its critical we get all this right. Theres too much important and innovative work to be done in space. Consider the payloads on the electron rocket built by new entrant rocket lab with its running out of Fingers Mission set for launch as soon as this friday out of the peninsula in new zealand. The faa licenses Rocket Lab Launches because its a u. S. Company. Why you may ask is this mission called running out of fingers . Its because its their tenth mission, and for your information theyve only been launching for two years so imagine that. Payloads on the electron this time include a thermal isolation experiment, a Telecommunications Satellite that can fit in the palm of your hand developed by a spanish company, and a small satellite built by tokyobased company that aims to create manmade shooting stars by simulating reentering meteor showers. Their tagline may not surprise you, shooting stars on demand. As they say you cant make this stuff up if you tried. But that when Mission Highlights just a small dose of the massive amount of energy, creativity and multinational Industry Collaboration that commercial space is bringing to the table. We at the faa are doing our part to make sure that these companies and payloads get the most efficient and safest access to space while at the same time making sure that those on the ground will be able to enjoy their shooting stars on demand. Thanks. Its a privilege to be with you today. Have a great conference. I look forward to being with you again soon. Thank you. music music