Reciprocal Waivers of Claims for Licensed or Permitted Launch and Reentry Activities, 55115-55133 [2016-18765]
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55115
TABLE 17—TEST OPERATING AND TEST CONDITION TOLERANCES FOR FROST ACCUMULATION HEATING MODE TESTS—
Continued
Test operating tolerance 1
Sub-interval H 2
Outdoor entering wet-bulb temperature, °F ...............................................................
External resistance to airflow, inches of water ..........................................................
Electrical voltage, % of rdg ........................................................................................
1.5
0.05
2.0
Test condition
tolerance 1
Sub-interval D 3
Sub-interval H 2
..............................
..............................
..............................
0.5
5 0.02
1.5
1 See
section 1.2 of this appendix, Definitions.
2 Applies when the heat pump is in the heating mode, except for the first 10 minutes after termination of a defrost cycle.
3 Applies during a defrost cycle and during the first 10 minutes after the termination of a defrost cycle when the heat pump is operating in the
heating mode.
4 For heat pumps that turn off the indoor blower during the defrost cycle, the noted tolerance only applies during the 10 minute interval that follows defrost termination.
5 Only applies when testing non-ducted heat pumps.
*
*
4.1.1
*
*
*
* * *
b. * * * Evaluate the cooling mode cyclic
degradation factor CDc as specified in section
3.5.3 of this appendix.
*
*
4.1.2.1
*
*
*
* * *
c. * * * Evaluate the cooling mode cyclic
degradation factor CDc as specified in section
3.5.3 of this appendix.
*
*
*
*
*
4.1.3.1 * * *
nj/N = fractional bin hours for the cooling
season; the ratio of the number of hours
during the cooling season when the
outdoor temperature fell within the
range represented by bin temperature Tj
to the total number of hours in the
cooling season, dimensionless.
Obtain the fractional bin hours for the
cooling season, nj/N, from Table 18. Use
Equations 4.1.3–1 and 4.1.3–2, respectively,
˙
˙
to evaluate Qck=1(Tj) and Eck=1(Tj). Evaluate
the cooling mode cyclic degradation factor
CDc as specified in section 3.5.3 of this
appendix.
*
Sections
*
*
*
*
4.1.4.1 * * *
* * * Evaluate the cooling mode cyclic
degradation factor CDc as specified in section
3.5.3 of this appendix.
*
*
*
*
*
Appendix M to Subpart B of Part 430—
[Amended]
5. In the table below, for each section
of appendix M to subpart B of part 430
indicated in the left column, remove the
language indicated in the middle
column from wherever it appears in that
section, and add the language indicated
in the right column.
■
Remove
Add
3.2.2.1, 3.2.3.a ...
A default value of CD may be used in lieu of conducting the
cyclic test. The default value of CDc is 0.20.
3.2.4.a ................
A default value for CDc may be used in lieu of conducting the
cyclic test. The default value of CDc is 0.25.
3.6.1 ...................
A default value for CDh may be used in lieu of conducting the
cyclic test. The default value of CDh is 0.25.
3.6.2, 3.6.4.a ......
A default value for CDh may be used in lieu of conducting the
cyclic. The default value of CDh is 0.25.
If the two optional tests are conducted but yield a tested CDc
that exceeds the default CDc or if the two optional tests are
not conducted, assign CDc the default value of 0.20.
If the two optional tests are conducted but yield a tested CDc
that exceeds the default CDc or if the two optional tests are
not conducted, assign CDc the default value of 0.25.
If this optional test is conducted but yields a tested CDh that
exceeds the default CDh or if the optional test is not conducted, assign CDh the default value of 0.25.
If this optional test is conducted but yields a tested CDh that
exceeds the default CDh or if the optional test is not conducted, assign CDh the default value of 0.25.
c
Appendix M to Subpart B of Part 430—
[Amended]
6. For each newly redesignated
section of appendix M to subpart B of
part 430 in the first column, remove the
cross reference sections in the middle
column, and add in their places, the
cross reference sections in the right
column.
[FR Doc. 2016–19227 Filed 8–17–16; 8:45 am]
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4.1.4.3 .......................
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 440
[Docket No.: FAA–2014–1012; Amdt. No.
440–4]
RIN 2120–AK44
4.1.3.1
4.1.3.2
4.1.3.3
4.1.3.4
4.1.3.4
Final rule.
The FAA is amending its
commercial space regulations governing
reciprocal waivers of claims to require
that customers waive claims against all
the customers involved in a launch or
reentry, including those signing a
different set of reciprocal waivers. Also,
customers of a customer contracting
directly with a licensee or permittee
will not have to sign a waiver directly
with the licensee or permittee, other
customers, or the FAA. The FAA is also
adding an appendix to provide
permittees with an example of a Waiver
of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities
with No Customer.
SUMMARY:
■
Section
ACTION:
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
Reciprocal Waivers of Claims for
Licensed or Permitted Launch and
Reentry Activities
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
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Effective October 17, 2016.
For information on where to
obtain copies of rulemaking documents
and other information related to this
final rule, see ‘‘How To Obtain
Additional Information’’ in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions concerning this rule, contact
Shirley McBride, Regulations Program
Lead, AST–300, Office of Commercial
Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, 800 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591;
telephone (202) 267–7470; email
Shirley.McBride@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
DATES:
ADDRESSES:
Authority for This Rulemaking
The Commercial Space Launch Act of
1984, as amended at 51 U.S.C. 50901–
50923 (Chapter 509), authorizes the
Department of Transportation and thus
the FAA, through delegations, to
oversee, license, and regulate
commercial launch and reentry
activities, and the operation of launch
and reentry sites as carried out by U.S.
citizens or within the United States. 51
U.S.C. 50904, 50905. The Act directs the
FAA to exercise this responsibility
consistent with public health and safety,
safety of property, and the national
security and foreign policy interests of
the United States. 51 U.S.C. 50905.
Section 50901(a)(7) directs the FAA to
regulate only to the extent necessary, in
relevant part, to protect the public
health and safety and safety of property.
The FAA is also responsible for
encouraging, facilitating, and promoting
commercial space launches by the
private sector. 51 U.S.C. 50903.
Chapter 509 requires that, for each
commercial space launch or reentry, the
Department of Transportation (DOT)
and, through delegation, the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) enter
into a reciprocal waiver of claims
agreement with ‘‘the licensee or
transferee, contractors, subcontractors,
crew, space flight participants, and
customers of the licensee or transferee,
and contractors and subcontractors of
the customers. . . .’’ 51 U.S.C.
50914(b)(2). This requirement also
applies to permittees under 51 U.S.C.
50906(i).
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I. Overview of Final Rule
This rule revises part 440 in the
following ways: (1) Amends § 440.17 to
describe fully the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements applicable to the
relevant appendices; (2) amends
§ 440.17 and updates appendices B and
C so that customers of any customer
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contracting directly with a licensee or
permittee do not have to sign a waiver
directly with the licensee or permittee,
other customers, or the FAA; (3) amends
§ 440.17 and updates appendices B and
C of part 440 so that customers waive
claims, as required by statute, against all
the customers involved in the launch or
reentry, including those signing a
different set of reciprocal waivers; (4)
amends § 440.3 to add a definition of
‘‘first-tier customer’’ and ‘‘part 440
customer’’; and (5) adds an appendix to
provide licensees with an example of a
Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities
with No Customer.
These changes will result in cost
savings to the licensee, government and
customers, and minimal cost to any
customer in a direct contractual
relationship with the licensee or
permittee if it has customers to the
launch. This rule does not address
changes to the reciprocal waiver of
claims created by the U.S. Commercial
Space Launch Competitiveness Act, P.L.
114–90 (2015). Those changes will be
addressed by a future rulemaking.
II. Background
On January 13, 2015, the FAA
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM), ‘‘Reciprocal
Waivers of Claims for Licensed or
Permitted Launch and Reentry
Activities,’’ 80 FR 1590, proposing to
amend the FAA’s regulations regarding
reciprocal waivers of claims agreements.
The NPRM also discussed the potential
burden the reciprocal waivers of claims
requirements may impose on licensees
and permittees launching hosted
payloads. The comment period closed
on March 16, 2015. On June 15, 2015,
the FAA reopened the comment period
for 30 days because the regulatory
evaluation was not posted to the docket
prior to the close of the NPRM’s
comment period. This second comment
period was limited to comments on the
regulatory evaluation only, and closed
on July 15, 2015. The FAA received five
comments on the NPRM and no
comments on the regulatory evaluation.
III. Discussion of Final Rule and Public
Comments
The FAA received comments from
five entities, including launch operators,
service providers, and one individual.
Launch operators who provided
comments are Blue Origin, LLC (Blue
Origin), Lockheed Martin Corporation
(Lockheed), and Space Exploration
Technologies Corporation (SpaceX).
Harris Corporation (Harris) and an
individual also commented.
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In general, the commenters supported
the proposed requirements. A few
commenters suggested changes to the
proposed regulatory text in order to
achieve the FAA’s proposed outcome.
After careful consideration of the
comments, the FAA generally adopts
the provisions as proposed, but makes
the following changes. The FAA amends
§ 440.17(b) and (c) and part 440,
appendices B and C, to include part 440
customers and their contractors and
subcontractors in the reciprocal waiver
of claims scheme. The FAA adds
§ 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) to preserve the
statutory and regulatory requirements
that all customers waive claims against
all the other parties involved in the
licensed permitted activity. Lastly, the
FAA removes permittees from the
indemnification scheme reserved by
statute for licensees only, thereby
maintaining the scope of the
indemnification scheme as set out in 51
U.S.C. 50915.
A. First-Tier and Part 440 Customers
As originally proposed, § 440.17(c) is
amended to require the FAA, the
licensee or permittee, and each first-tier
customer to enter into a reciprocal
waiver of claims agreement for each
licensed or permitted activity in which
the U.S. Government, any agency, or its
contractors and subcontractors are
involved, or where property insurance
is required under § 440.9(d).
Additionally, as proposed, § 440.3 is
amended to define the terms ‘‘first-tier
customer’’ and ‘‘part 440 customer.’’ A
first-tier customer is one who satisfies
the definition of a customer and has a
contractual relationship with a license
or permit holder to obtain launch or
reentry services. A part 440 customer
means one who satisfies the regulatory
definition of a customer and who is not
a first-tier customer. Blue Origin
requested that the FAA clarify how a
licensee or permittee should identify its
customers under the proposed rule. The
FAA adopts these provisions as
proposed, and provides further
clarification below.
Blue Origin requested clarification on
how the requirement to enter into a
reciprocal waiver of claims agreement
with each first-tier customer would
apply to a situation in which a first-tier
customer was a single entity
representing a group of persons. Blue
Origin stated that it ‘‘interprets the
proposal to require that only the single
entity representing the group will be
required to sign a reciprocal waiver with
the licensee/permittee and FAA.’’ 1 Blue
Origin also requested that the FAA
1 Blue
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Origin Comment at 2.
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confirm that ‘‘if a first-tier customer is
a single entity representing a group of
persons, the licensee/permittee is
required to enter into a cross waiver of
claims only with a representative of the
group as the first-tier customer.’’ 2
An entity’s status as the
representative of a group is not the
determining factor as to whether or not
that entity is required to sign a
reciprocal waiver with the licensee or
permittee and the FAA. Rather, a
licensee or permittee is only required to
enter into a reciprocal waiver with
customers with whom it is in a
contractual relationship.
To determine the entities with which
it must execute a reciprocal waiver, the
licensee or permittee should determine
what entities it has contracted with for
the licensed or permitted activity who
also qualify as customers under 14 CFR
440.3. Accordingly, if a licensee entered
into a contract with a number of entities
for launch or reentry services, it would
enter into reciprocal waivers with each
of them.
Blue Origin provided a hypothetical
scenario in which a school, university
research lab, or other educational
institution represented a group of
students that contributed to the
development of a payload. In this
hypothetical situation, the single entity
representing the group may be the only
entity required to sign a reciprocal
waiver with the licensee or permittee
and the FAA. However, the hypothetical
entity would be the only entity required
to sign the reciprocal waiver only if it
was the only entity in a contractual
relationship with the licensee or
permittee, and therefore the only entity
who would qualify as a first-tier
customer.3 In that case, the
representative would be the only firsttier customer and, therefore, the only
party required to sign the reciprocal
waiver of claims with the licensee or
permittee and the FAA. If, however, any
other member of the group was also in
a direct contractual relationship with
the licensee or permittee and also met
the FAA’s definition of customer under
§ 440.3, that member would also be a
first-tier customer and would also be
required to sign a reciprocal waiver of
claims with the licensee or permittee
and the FAA. It would not, however,
have to sign with all other first-tier
customers because this final rule
ensures that customers waive claims
against all other customers involved in
a launch or reentry, including those
signing different reciprocal waivers.
Blue Origin also expressed concern
regarding how a licensee or permittee
will determine who its customers are.
Specifically, Blue Origin pointed out
that determining whether each party has
an interest in the payload is
complicated by the fact that ‘‘people
have varying levels of involvement (e.g.,
a student works an entire semester on a
project, vs. one who works a few hours),
or have left the group (e.g., some
students graduate prior to completion of
a payload, and are replaced by other
students).’’ 4
The FAA is not changing the
definition of ‘‘customer’’ under § 440.3
in this rulemaking. However, the burden
of identifying part 440 customers does
shift with this rule, not to the licensee
or permittee as Blue Origin suggests, but
to the appropriate first-tier customer.
This is because under this rule a
licensee or permittee is responsible for
implementing a reciprocal waiver of
claims only with those customers with
whom it is in a direct contractual
relationship. A first-tier customer, as a
result of this rule, will be responsible
for implementing a reciprocal waiver of
claims with each of its customers.
Although it is not changing the
definition of customer under § 440.3,
the FAA reiterates what it has said
about the definition of customer in
previous rulemakings. In its 1996
rulemaking, the FAA pointed out that it
construes the term customer in
proposed § 440.3 more broadly than just
‘‘the party that actually contracts with
the commercial launch services
provider and prospective licensee.’’ 5
The 1996 NPRM provided the example
of a customer who had placed its
property on board the payload in order
to receive an on-orbit service, such as
microgravity experiments, and stated
that such an entity would be considered
a customer to the launch even though it
did not procure the launch.6 In the final
rule that resulted from the 1996 NPRM,
the FAA stated: ‘‘The definition of
‘customer’ is further modified in the
final rule to include any person who
places property on board a payload for
the purpose of obtaining launch or
payload services . . . .’’ 7
The FAA’s definition of customer,
therefore, as applied to Blue Origin’s
hypothetical, would be based on
4 Blue
Origin Comment at 2.
Responsibility Requirements for
Licensed Launch Activities, NPRM, 61 FR 38992,
39002 (July 25, 1996).
6 Financial Responsibility, 61 FR at 39002.
7 Financial Responsibility Requirements for
Licensed Launch Activities, Final Rule, 63 FR
45592, 45607 (August 26, 1998).
5 Financial
2 Blue
Origin Comment at 2.
FAA assumes for purposes of this
hypothetical that the entity representing the group
meets the FAA’s definition of customer in 14 CFR
440.3, by, for example, being the one who procures
the launch.
3 The
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55117
ownership rights in the payload rather
than the level of involvement in
developing the payload. For example, a
person may build a payload and sell it
to a company. The company may then
place that payload on board a rocket.
The builder has no ownership rights in
the payload, and therefore would not be
a customer under § 440.3. The company
who purchased, and therefore owns the
payload, would be a customer under
§ 440.3. The person facing financial
exposure for failing to properly identify
these other non-signing customers
would be the first-tier customer.
B. Government Customers
A Government customer need not sign
a reciprocal waiver of claims because
the FAA signs the reciprocal waiver of
claims on behalf of the Government.
Although, the proposed rule did not
mention Government customers, Harris
Corporation requested clarification on
the treatment of Government-hosted
payload customers on commercial
payloads launched pursuant to Chapter
509. The FAA makes no change based
on this comment.
Specifically, Harris asked whether the
FAA would sign the waiver form on
behalf of a Government customer,
whether a Government customer could
be considered a part 440 customer, and
whether a Government customer’s
contractor would be considered a
contractor of the United States for
purposes of § 440.14(c). As the agency
has stated in previous rulemakings,
‘‘[w]hen the licensee’s customer is a
U.S. Government agency, the agency is
treated the same as any
nongovernmental customer for purposes
of determining the appropriate amount
of property insurance required of the
licensee and in terms of the U.S.
Government’s waiver of claims or
property damage or less above the
required amount of property insurance
under [51 U.S.C. 50914(b)(2)]. That is, a
Government payload is not covered by
the required Government property
insurance and the United States
Government agency-customer accepts
responsibility for property damage to
the payload.’’ 8
Because the FAA signs on behalf of
the U.S. Government, any Government
customer would not separately sign any
reciprocal waiver of claims. The
designation as a part 440 customer does
not change a customer’s responsibilities
under the reciprocal waivers of claims,
it only affects with whom the customer
must sign a reciprocal waiver of claims.
A Government customer’s status as a
first-tier or part 440 customer does not
8 Financial
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Responsibility, 61 FR at 39001.
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matter, because the FAA signs on behalf
of the Government.
As to Harris’ last question concerning
whether a contractor of a Government
customer would be considered a
contractor of the United States for
purposes of § 440.14(c), it is beyond the
scope of the current rulemaking.
Additionally, the FAA notes that
§ 440.14(c) is not currently a regulatory
provision.
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C. Extension of the Reciprocal Waivers
of Claims Requirements
The FAA intended to amend only the
method by which the obligations under
the reciprocal waiver of claims were
extended. Rather than requiring the
licensee or permittee to implement the
reciprocal waiver of claims with its
contractors, subcontractors, customers,
and customers’ contractors and
subcontractors, this rule requires that
each customer extend the reciprocal
waiver of claims to its contractors and
subcontractors. Although it did not
receive comment on the issue, the FAA
adds the extension of the reciprocal
waiver of claims requirements to
§ 440.17(b) to require the licensee or
permittee, each first-tier customer, and
each part 440 customer to extend the
requirements to their respective
contractors and subcontractors.
Therefore, and as discussed below, a
part 440 customer must waive and
release claims, assume responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnify other
parties identified in the waiver as a
result of both the explicit requirement
in § 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) and the
extension of the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements in § 440.17(c)(2)
and (c)(1)(iii).
Additionally, the FAA adds language
to § 440.17(c)(2)(i), (ii), and (iii), and the
associated part 440 appendices
specifying that a party to a reciprocal
waiver of claims must agree in that
waiver to indemnify another party to the
agreement from claims by the
indemnifying party’s contractors,
subcontractors, and in the case of the
customer, customers, arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to correctly
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirement. This change was
contemplated by the proposed rule, and
preserves the requirements of this
section prior to the amendments
included in this final rule.
1. Extension of Reciprocal Waiver of
Claims to Part 440 Customers’
Contractors and Subcontractors
SpaceX commented that the proposed
rule did not effectively extend the
reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to a part 440 customer’s
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contractors and subcontractors such that
those contractors and subcontractors
waived claims against all other parties
otherwise protected by the reciprocal
waiver of claims. SpaceX also
commented that the appendices should
be adjusted to state that a first-tier
customer indemnifies the appropriate
parties from and against liability, loss,
or damage arising out of any claim
brought by its customer’s contractors
and subcontractors. Harris commented
that § 440.17(b) should be revised to
include part 440 customers and their
contractors and subcontractors in the
waiver scheme to ensure that the parties
to the reciprocal waiver of claims waive
claims against them. In this rule the
FAA changes § 440.17 to apply to part
440 customers’ contractors and
subcontractors, but does not adopt
SpaceX’s proposed language for the
appendices. This marks a change from
the regulatory text that the FAA
originally proposed, based on comments
discussed below.
SpaceX recommended additions to
proposed § 440.17 and the associated
appendices ‘‘to ensure that the
regulations maintain the current
obligations of all customers’ contractors
and subcontractors with respect to the
licensee/permittee.’’ 9 SpaceX stated
that although the proposed rule might
streamline the reciprocal waiver of
claims process, ‘‘it does not expressly
provide the same protections to the
licensee or permittee contained in the
current rule.’’ 10 Specifically, SpaceX
argued that, under the proposed rule,
the licensee or permittee would have
been required to waive and release any
claims it might have against a part 440
customer and its contractors and
subcontractors, but a part 440
customer’s contractors and
subcontractors would not have been
required to waive claims against all
other parties to which the reciprocal
waiver requirements extended. SpaceX
also noted that the contractors and
subcontractors of a part 440 customer
were not accounted for in proposed
§ 440.17 or in proposed sections 4(b)
and 5(b) of the part 440 appendices in
the same way as under the current rules.
SpaceX provided suggested language to
address what it saw as inconsistencies.
After considering the comments, the
FAA has decided to make changes to the
regulatory text to preserve the intent of
this rulemaking and Chapter 509.
Accordingly, § 440.17(b) and (c) require
that each customer extends the
reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to the customer’s
9 SpaceX
comment p. 1
10 SpaceX comment at p. 2
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contractors and subcontractors. The
reciprocal waiver of claims requires that
the contractors and subcontractors of
each customer waive and release claims,
assume responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnify other parties identified
in the waiver, including the licensee or
permittee. This rule explicitly requires
the licensee or permittee, each first-tier
customer, and each part 440 customer to
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to their contractors,
subcontractors and customers.
The FAA notes, however, that SpaceX
recommended changing the text in each
of the appendices to part 440 at section
4(b) to read: ‘‘Customer shall extend the
requirements of the waiver . . .
respectively, to its Contractors,
Subcontractors, customers, and such
customers’ contractors and
subcontractors . . . .’’ The FAA is not
adopting this suggested change for two
reasons. First, this suggested language
misappropriates the responsibility to
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements. Under SpaceX’s proposed
language, each first-tier customer would
be required to extend the reciprocal
waiver of claims requirements to its
customers’ contractors and
subcontractors. Instead, this rule
requires each customer to extend the
reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to its contractors and
subcontractors, but not to its customers’
contractors and subcontractors. This is
consistent with the previous version of
the part 440 appendices. Second, this
language is unnecessary because the
extension of responsibilities in
§ 440.17(b)(2) and (3) and (c)(1)(iii)
created by this rulemaking ensure that
a part 440 customer extends to the
customer’s contractors and
subcontractors the requirements of the
reciprocal waiver of claims, which
include waiving and releasing claims,
assuming responsibility, and holding
harmless and indemnifying other parties
identified in the waiver,11 because a
first-tier customer must extend the
waiver requirements to its customer. In
other words, the requirements work as
follows:
(1) Under § 440.17 and the part 440
appendices, a first-tier customer must
waive and release claims, assume
responsibility, hold harmless, and
indemnify other parties identified in the
waiver, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b)
and 3(a) of the appendices.
Additionally, a first-tier customer must
extend each of these requirements to its
11 See, e.g., 80 FR 1590, 1600 (extending the
assumption of responsibility and waiver and release
of claims for a licensed launch with one customer).
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contractors, subcontractors, and
customers.
(2) Because a first-tier customer must
extend the requirements of the waiver,
including the requirement to extend the
waiver, to its customers, it follows that
its customers will have the same
obligation as a first-tier customer under
the waiver.
(3) Therefore, because of the
extension of responsibilities, a first-tier
customer’s customers will be required,
in turn, to extend the waiver
requirements to their contractors,
subcontractors and customers.
Additionally, § 440.17(b)(3) and
(c)(1)(iii) explicitly require that each
part 440 customer extends the
reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to its contractors and
subcontractors.
Therefore, the FAA does not need to
amend section 4(b) of the appendices to
ensure that part 440 customers extend
the waiver requirements to their
contractors and subcontractors. Section
440.17(b)(2) and (3) and (c)(1)(iii) and
section 4(b) of the appendices already
require this. The FAA also disagrees
with SpaceX’s suggestion to amend
section 5(b) of the appendices to require
that a first-tier customer indemnify the
appropriate parties from and against
liability, loss, or damage arising out of
any claim brought by its customer’s
contractors and subcontractors.
Adopting SpaceX’s suggestion would
place an additional burden of
indemnification on a first-tier customer
that did not previously exist in part 440.
Previous part 440 appendices required
only that a first-tier customer indemnify
the appropriate parties from and against
liability, loss, or damage arising out of
certain claims brought by its
contractors, subcontractors, and
employees. SpaceX’s proposed language
would additionally require a first-tier
customer to indemnify from claims
brought by its customer’s contractors,
subcontractors, and employees. As
explained above, a first-tier customer is
required to extend the reciprocal waiver
of claims requirements to its customers.
As a result of this extension, a first-tier
customer’s customer, rather than the
first-tier customer himself, is required to
indemnify against certain claims
brought by its contractors,
subcontractors, and employees.
Lastly, Harris pointed out that the
absence of part 440 customers and their
contractors and subcontractors in
proposed § 440.17(b) exposes these
parties to liability that represents a
departure from Chapter 509. The FAA
agrees, and this rule requires parties to
the reciprocal waiver of claims
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described in § 440.17(b) to waive claims
against part 440 customers and their
contractors and subcontractors.
2. Extension of Reciprocal Waiver of
Claims to Part 440 Customers
In its comment, Harris also noted that
the FAA overlooked explicitly requiring
each part 440 customer to comply with
the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements. Therefore, the FAA now
adds an explicit requirement in addition
to the extension of requirements
provisions in order to clarify that each
part 440 customer must enter into a
reciprocal waiver of claims agreement.
This marks a change from the regulatory
text that the FAA originally proposed.
Harris commented that proposed
§ 440.17(b) and (c) would not have
ensured that part 440 customers waive
claims against the other parties included
in the waiver scheme. Harris further
asserted that the purpose behind the
waiver scheme is ‘‘(1) [t]o limit the total
universe of claims that might arise as a
result of a launch; and (2) to eliminate
the necessity for all of these parties to
obtain property and casualty insurance
to protect against these claims.’’ 12
The FAA agrees. Under Chapter 509
and the FAA’s current rules, the
licensee or permittee is required to enter
into a reciprocal waiver of claims with
all customers and their respective
contractors and subcontractors involved
in launch or reentry services. In other
words, each customer must waive and
release claims, assume responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnify other
parties identified in the waiver. In the
NPRM, the FAA proposed to require
only first-tier customers to sign a
reciprocal waiver of claims with the
FAA and the licensee or permittee. By
separating first-tier customers from part
440 customers, the proposed rule did
not explicitly require part 440
customers to waive and release claims,
assume responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnify other parties identified
in the waiver. Instead, these
requirements were implied by the
extension of requirements in which a
first-tier customer is required to extend
the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to its customers,
contractors, and subcontractors. Because
commenters expressed some confusion
about the requirements, the FAA
amends § 440.17(b) and adds
§ 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) to explicitly require
that part 440 customers waive claims
12 Commercial Space Launch Act Amendments of
1988, Report of the Senate Committee on
Commerce, Science, and Transportation on H.R.
4399, S. Rep. No. 100–593 at 14 (Oct. 7, 1988).
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55119
against all the other parties involved in
the licensed activity.
As stated previously, these
requirements levied on part 440
customers also exist as a result of the
extension of the reciprocal waiver of
claims that is required by § 440.17(b)(2),
(b)(3), and (c)(1)(iii). By shifting the
responsibility to extend the reciprocal
waiver of claims from the licensee or
permittee to the appropriate customer,
the burden to indemnify also shifts.
Therefore, should a customer fail to
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to its customer, and its
customer bring a claim against a party
involved in the launch, the customer
who failed to extend would be required
to indemnify that party against its
customer’s claim. This represents a shift
from the old scheme in which all
customers signed the reciprocal waiver
of claims, and therefore no one would
be required to indemnify against a
customer’s claim unless the licensee
failed to identify a customer and ensure
that that customer signed the reciprocal
waiver of claims.
D. Removal of Permittees From
Indemnification Scheme
This rule does not change the
indemnification scheme created by 51
U.S.C. 50915. Chapter 509 provides that
the United States Government shall pay
for a successful third party claim to the
extent the claim exceeds the insurance
coverage required by statute but does
not exceed the statutory limit for such
coverage, provided Congress
appropriates the funds.13 Chapter 509
also lists the persons against whom the
claim may be brought in order to qualify
for this coverage.14 This list includes
licensees, but does not include
permittees. Therefore, Congress will not
appropriate funds for a third party claim
against a permittee that exceeds the
insurance requirements in Chapter 509.
Although it received no comments on
the issue, the FAA has identified an
error in the proposed rule that it
corrects with the final rule. In the
proposed rule, the FAA would have
included permittees in the
indemnification scheme reserved by
statute for licensees only. Because this
error would create a conflict with the
FAA’s statutory authority, which the
FAA did not intend, the FAA has
amended the regulatory text in this final
rule to comply with Chapter 509 by
removing permittees from the section
50915 indemnification scheme.
13 51
14 51
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U.S.C. 50915(a)(1).
U.S.C. 50915(a)(3)(A).
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E. Miscellaneous
This rule includes a new § 440.17(f) to
include all provisions related to willful
misconduct. The NPRM did not propose
changing the willful misconduct
provisions, and this rule also does not
change those provisions but located
them in § 440.17(f) for clarity.
IV. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
A. Regulatory Evaluation
Changes to Federal regulations must
undergo several economic analyses.
First, Executive Order 12866 and
Executive Order 13563 direct that each
Federal agency shall propose or adopt a
regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that the benefits of the
intended regulation justify its costs.
Second, the Regulatory Flexibility Act
of 1980 (Public Law 96–354) requires
agencies to analyze the economic
impact of regulatory changes on small
entities. Third, the Trade Agreements
Act (Public Law 96–39) prohibits
agencies from setting standards that
create unnecessary obstacles to the
foreign commerce of the United States.
In developing U.S. standards, this Trade
Act requires agencies to consider
international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis of
U.S. standards. Fourth, the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public
Law 104–4) requires agencies to prepare
a written assessment of the costs,
benefits, and other effects of proposed
or final rules that include a Federal
mandate likely to result in the
expenditure by State, local, or tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
annually (adjusted for inflation with
base year of 1995). This portion of the
preamble summarizes the FAA’s
analysis of the economic impacts of this
final rule. We suggest readers seeking
greater detail read the full regulatory
evaluation, a copy of which we have
placed in the docket for this rulemaking.
In conducting these analyses, FAA
has determined that this final rule: (1)
Has benefits that justify its costs, (2) is
not an economically ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ as defined in section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866, (3) is not
‘‘significant’’ as defined in DOT’s
Regulatory Policies and Procedures; (4)
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities; (5) will not create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States; and (6) will not impose
an unfunded mandate on State, local, or
tribal governments, or on the private
sector by exceeding the threshold
identified above. These analyses are
summarized below. As we received no
comments on the benefit cost
methodology, we used the same
methodology here.
Total Benefits and Costs of This Rule
These changes will result in cost
savings to the licensee or permittee,
Government and customers and
minimal cost to the first-tier customer if
it has customers to the launch.
Cost savings are presented in the table
below, which is discussed in more
detail in the paragraphs that follow.
COST SAVINGS FROM THE FINAL RULE
Average
7% Present
value cost
savings
3% Present
value cost
savings
Government Cost Savings ...........................................................................................................
Licensee and Permittee Cost Savings:
No Longer Requesting Waivers ...........................................................................................
No Longer Obtaining Part 440 Customer Signatures .................................................................
Cost Savings from Allowing Signatures on Different Set of Reciprocal Waiver of Claims .........
$138,440
$97,232
$118,092
136,282
17,035
365
95,716
11,965
256
116,251
14,531
311
Total estimated cost savings .........................................................................................
292,121
205,169
249,185
Minor rounding occurs in summation.
The final rule might result in minimal
costs to first-tier customers who will be
responsible for implementing reciprocal
waivers of claims with their customers.
Who Is Potentially Affected by This
Rule?
Launch Licensees and Permittees
Federal Government
Customers of the Launch Licensees and
Permittees
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Assumptions
The following assumptions apply to
the analysis:
• Ten year time horizon
• 2013 dollars
• Without the rule, the FAA will issue
4 partial waivers to the reciprocal
cross waiver requirement per year
• Without the rule, a licensee or
permittee will have to obtain some
signatures from part 440 customers on
launches unless waivers have been
issued
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Benefits of This Rule
The final rule will result in cost
savings because licensees and
permittees will no longer have to obtain
signatures of part 440 customers on the
reciprocal waiver of claims. Cost savings
may result because licensees and
permittees will not have to incur
expenses to obtain part 440 signatures
or licensees and permittees will not seek
waivers from the FAA to the
requirement that part 440 customers
sign the reciprocal waiver of claims. The
estimated cost savings to the licensee,
permittee, and the Federal Government
that will result were indicated in the
table above.
Also, the FAA estimated a small cost
savings due to the final rule allowing a
customer added at the last minute to
sign a new and separate waiver of
claims agreement.
Finally, the FAA expects minimal
cost savings with the addition of a
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template for permitted activities with no
customer.
Costs of This Rule
The responsibility to obtain signatures
of customers who are not in a direct
contractual relationship (i.e., part 440
customers) with the licensee or
permittee will shift under the final rule,
from the licensee or permittee to the
appropriate first-tier customer. The FAA
expects the costs the first-tier customer
will incur under the rule to implement
the reciprocal waiver of claims to be
minimal because the first-tier customer
could modify the templates provided in
appendices B and C to part 440 and add
them to the contract that it has with its
customers. The FAA thinks that this
will be a one-time cost that could be
accomplished in a short period of time
by the company’s in-house lawyers. In
addition, customers are currently
required to extend the FAA reciprocal
waiver of claims obligations to their
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respective contractors and
subcontractors, so the FAA does not
expect the changes to the NPRM to
result in additional costs.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Determination
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(Pub. L. 96–354) (RFA) establishes ‘‘as a
principle of regulatory issuance that
agencies shall endeavor, consistent with
the objectives of the rule and of
applicable statutes, to fit regulatory and
informational requirements to the scale
of the businesses, organizations, and
governmental jurisdictions subject to
regulation. To achieve this principle,
agencies are required to solicit and
consider flexible regulatory proposals
and to explain the rationale for their
actions to assure that such proposals are
given serious consideration.’’ The RFA
covers a wide-range of small entities,
including small businesses, not-forprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions.
Agencies must perform a review to
determine whether a rule will have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. If
the agency determines that it will, the
agency must prepare a regulatory
flexibility analysis as described in the
RFA.
However, if an agency determines that
a rule is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
section 605(b) of the RFA provides that
the head of the agency may so certify
and a regulatory flexibility analysis is
not required. The certification must
include a statement providing the
factual basis for this determination, and
the reasoning should be clear.
The FAA believes that this final rule
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of entities because
the rule will result in cost savings and
some minimal costs as described below.
The FAA solicited comments in the
NPRM regarding the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis minimal cost
determination, and received none. As
we made the same determination for the
initial regulatory flexibility analysis, we
accept this determination for the final
regulatory flexibility analysis. The
reasons for the minimal cost
determination are provided below.
Cost savings are expected because the
licensee or permittee will no longer
have to request waivers or obtain part
440 customers’ signatures, nor have to
reopen the original waivers to obtain
signatures if a party is added to the
launch at the last minute. However,
there might be minimal costs to first-tier
customers. The responsibility to obtain
signatures of customers who are not in
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a direct contractual relationship (i.e.,
part 440 customers) with the licensee or
permittee will shift under the final rule,
from the licensee or permittee to the
appropriate first-tier customer. This will
be a new requirement on the first-tier
customer.
Under the final rule, the first-tier
customers will be responsible, as
described above, for implementing a
reciprocal waiver of claims with their
customers. These costs will be minimal
because the first-tier customer could
modify the templates provided in
appendices B and C to part 440 and add
it to the contract that it has with its
customers. The FAA thinks that this
will be a one-time cost that could be
accomplished in a short period of time
by the company’s in-house lawyers at an
estimated cost of $185.
It is not clear whether this minimal
cost will impact a substantial number of
small entities. To date, the FAA is
unaware of any small entities who
would be affected. The agency does not
know whether in the future there might
be small entities, that will have to
implement a reciprocal waiver of claims
with their customers, but even if there
were a substantial number of small
entities, the final rule will not have a
significant impact on these entities.
Therefore, as provided in section
605(b), the head of the FAA certifies
that this rulemaking will not result in a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
C. International Trade Impact
Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979
(Pub. L. 96–39), as amended by the
Uruguay Round Agreements Act (Pub.
L. 103–465), prohibits Federal agencies
from establishing standards or engaging
in related activities that create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign
commerce of the United States.
Pursuant to these Acts, the
establishment of standards is not
considered an unnecessary obstacle to
the foreign commerce of the United
States, so long as the standard has a
legitimate domestic objective, such as
the protection of safety, and does not
operate in a manner that excludes
imports that meet this objective. The
statute also requires consideration of
international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis for
U.S. standards. The FAA has assessed
the potential effect of this final rule and
determined that it will impose the same
costs on domestic and international
entities and thus has a neutral trade
impact.
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55121
D. Unfunded Mandates Assessment
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates
Reform Act of 1995 (Pub.L. 104–4)
requires each Federal agency to prepare
a written statement assessing the effects
of any Federal mandate in a proposed or
final agency rule that may result in an
expenditure of $100 million or more (in
1995 dollars) in any one year by State,
local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector; such
a mandate is deemed to be a ‘‘significant
regulatory action.’’ The FAA currently
uses an inflation-adjusted value of
$155.0 million in lieu of $100 million.
This final rule does not contain such a
mandate; therefore, the requirements of
Title II of the Act do not apply.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) requires that the
FAA consider the impact of paperwork
and other information collection
burdens imposed on the public. The
FAA has determined that there would
be no new requirement for information
collection associated with this rule.
F. International Compatibility and
Cooperation
In keeping with U.S. obligations
under the Convention on International
Civil Aviation, it is FAA policy to
conform to International Civil Aviation
Organization (ICAO) Standards and
Recommended Practices to the
maximum extent practicable. The FAA
has determined that there are no ICAO
Standards and Recommended Practices
that correspond to these proposed
regulations.
G. Environmental Analysis
FAA Order 1050.1F identifies FAA
actions that are categorically excluded
from preparation of an environmental
assessment or environmental impact
statement under the National
Environmental Policy Act in the
absence of extraordinary circumstances.
The FAA has determined this
rulemaking action qualifies for the
categorical exclusion identified in
paragraph 5–6.6 and involves no
extraordinary circumstances.
V. Executive Order Determinations
A. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this final rule
under the principles and criteria of
Executive Order 13132, Federalism. The
agency determined that this action will
not have a substantial direct effect on
the States, or the relationship between
the Federal Government and the States,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
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levels of government, and, therefore,
does not have Federalism implications.
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/
rulemaking/sbre_act/.
B. Executive Order 13211, Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 440
Indemnity payments, Insurance,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Space transportation and
exploration.
The FAA analyzed this final rule
under Executive Order 13211, Actions
Concerning Regulations that
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). The
agency has determined that it is not a
‘‘significant energy action’’ under the
executive order and it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
VI. How To Obtain Additional
Information
1. The authority citation for part 440
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 51 U.S.C. 50901–50923.
An electronic copy of a rulemaking
document may be obtained by using the
Internet—
1. Search the Federal eRulemaking
Portal (https://www.regulations.gov);
2. Visit the FAA’s Regulations and
Policies Web page at https://
www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/ or
3. Access the Government Printing
Office’s Web page at https://
www.gpo.gov/fdsys/.
Copies may also be obtained by
sending a request (identified by notice,
amendment, or docket number of this
rulemaking) to the Federal Aviation
Administration, Office of Rulemaking,
ARM–1, 800 Independence Avenue
SW., Washington, DC 20591, or by
calling (202) 267–9680.
B. Comments Submitted to the Docket
Comments received may be viewed by
going to https://www.regulations.gov and
following the online instructions to
search the docket number for this
action. Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of all comments
received into any of the FAA’s dockets
by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the
comment, if submitted on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, etc.).
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C. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires the FAA to comply with
small entity requests for information or
advice about compliance with statutes
and regulations within its jurisdiction.
A small entity with questions regarding
this document, may contact its local
FAA official, or the person listed under
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
heading at the beginning of the
preamble. To find out more about
SBREFA on the Internet, visit https://
15:00 Aug 17, 2016
PART 440—FINANCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY
■
A. Rulemaking Documents
VerDate Sep<11>2014
The Amendments
In consideration of the foregoing, the
Federal Aviation Administration
amends chapter III of title 14, Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
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2. Amend § 440.3 by adding the
definitions of first-tier customer and
part 440 customer in alphabetical order
to read as follows:
■
§ 440.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
First-tier customer means a customer
as defined in this section, and who has
a contractual relationship with a license
or permit holder to obtain launch or
reentry services.
*
*
*
*
*
Part 440 customer means a customer
as defined in this section, other than a
first-tier customer.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Amend § 440.17 by revising
paragraphs (b) through (f) to read as
follows:
§ 440.17 Reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) The licensee or permittee and each
of its contractors and subcontractors,
each customer, and each customer’s
contractors and subcontractors, must
enter into a reciprocal waiver of claims
agreement under which each party
waives and releases claims against all
the other parties to the waiver and
against any other customer, and agrees
to assume financial responsibility for
property damage it sustains and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by its own employees, and to
hold harmless and indemnify each other
from bodily injury or property damage
sustained by its employees, resulting
from a licensed or permitted activity,
regardless of fault.
(1) The licensee or permittee must
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to each of its contractors
and subcontractors involved in launch
or reentry services, and each of its firsttier customers.
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(2) Any first-tier customer must
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to each of its contractors
and subcontractors involved in launch
or reentry services, and each of its
customers.
(3) Any part 440 customer must
extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirements to each of its contractors
and subcontractors involved in launch
or reentry services, and each of its
customers.
(c) For each licensed or permitted
activity in which the United States, or
its contractors and subcontractors, is
involved or where property insurance is
required under § 440.9(d), the Federal
Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, the
licensee or permittee, and each first-tier
customer must enter into a reciprocal
waiver of claims agreement. The
reciprocal waiver of claims must be in
the form set forth in appendix B of this
part for a licensed activity, in appendix
C of this part for a permitted activity, or
in a form that otherwise provides all the
same obligations and benefits. The
reciprocal waiver of claims must
provide that:
(1) Each party to the reciprocal waiver
of claims, including the United States
but only to the extent provided in
legislation:
(i) Waives and releases claims it may
have against each other party to the
reciprocal waiver of claims, any
customer, and against their respective
contractors and subcontractors, for
property damage it sustains and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted
activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assumes responsibility for
property damage it sustains and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted
activities, regardless of fault. A licensee
or permittee and each first-tier customer
shall each hold harmless and indemnify
each other, the United States, any other
customer, and the contractors and
subcontractors of each for bodily injury
or property damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from licensed or
permitted activities, regardless of fault;
and
(iii) Extends the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, to its
contractors and subcontractors involved
in launch and reentry services, and, for
each customer, to its contractors and
subcontractors involved in launch and
reentry services, and customers, by
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requiring them to waive and release all
claims as follows:
(A) For each contractor and
subcontractor of the licensee or
permittee, all claims against any
customer, the United States, and each of
their respective contractors and
subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold
harmless and indemnify any customer,
the United States, and each of their
respective contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault;
(B) For each contractor and
subcontractor of any customer, all
claims against the licensee or permittee,
any other customer, the United States,
and each of their respective contractors
and subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold
harmless and indemnify the licensee or
permittee, any other customer, the
United States, and each of their
respective contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault;
(C) For each contractor and
subcontractor of the United States, all
claims against the licensee or permittee,
any customer, and each of their
respective contractors and
subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold
harmless and indemnify the licensee or
permittee, any other customer, the
United States, and each of their
respective contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault to the
extent that claims they would otherwise
have for such damage or injury exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c)
and (e);
(D) For each part 440 customer, all
claims against the licensee or permittee,
any other customer, the United States,
and each of their respective contractors
and subcontractors; and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold
harmless and indemnify the licensee or
permittee, any other customer, the
United States, and each of their
respective contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own
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employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault; and
(2) For the following parties—
(i) The licensee or permittee must
hold harmless and indemnify each firsttier customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of
them; the United States and its servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any part
440 customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them
from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that any of
licensee’s or permittee’s contractors and
subcontractors may have for property
damage sustained by them and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by their employees, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities
and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly
the waiver requirement. The
requirement of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section to hold harmless and indemnify
the United States and its servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, does not
apply when:
(A) Claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its
agents;
(B) Claims for property damage
sustained by the United States or its
contractors and subcontractors exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e);
(C) For licensed activity, claims by a
third party for bodily injury or property
damage exceed the amount of insurance
or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c),
and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above such amount, and are
payable pursuant to the provisions of 51
U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19; or
(D) The licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c).
(ii) Each first-tier customer must hold
harmless and indemnify the licensee or
permittee and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of
them; the United States and its servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any part
440 customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that any of
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55123
each first-tier customer’s customers,
contractors, or subcontractors, may have
for property damage sustained by them
and for bodily injury or property
damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted
activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to
implement properly the waiver
requirement.
(iii) The Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of
Transportation on behalf of the United
States, but only to the extent provided
in legislation, must hold harmless and
indemnify the licensee or permittee,
each first-tier customer, any part 440
customer, and their respective directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that
contractors and subcontractors of the
United States may have for property
damage sustained by them and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by their employees, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities
and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly
the waiver requirement to the extent
that claims they would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration
of financial responsibility required
under § 440.9(c) and (e).
(d) For each licensed or permitted
activity in which the United States or its
contractors and subcontractors are
involved, the Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of
Transportation and each space flight
participant must enter into or have in
place a reciprocal waiver of claims
agreement. The reciprocal waiver of
claims must be in the form set forth in
appendix E of this part, or in a form that
otherwise provides all the same
obligations and benefits.
(1) The reciprocal waiver of claims
must provide that each space flight
participant:
(i) Waive and release claims he or she
may have against the United States, and
against each of its contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by the space
flight participant, resulting from
licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for bodily
injury or property damage, sustained by
the space flight participant, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault;
(iii) Hold harmless the United States,
and its contractors and subcontractors,
for bodily injury or property damage,
sustained by the space flight participant,
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resulting from licensed or permitted
activities, regardless of fault; and
(iv) Hold harmless and indemnify the
United States and its servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them, from and against
liability, loss, or damage arising out of
claims brought by anyone for property
damage or bodily injury sustained by
the space flight participant, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities.
(2) The reciprocal waiver of claims
must provide that the United States:
(i) Waive and release claims it may
have against the space flight participant
for property damage it sustains, and for
bodily injury or property damage
sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted
activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for property
damage it sustains, and for bodily injury
or property damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise
have for such damage or injury exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c)
and (e), respectively;
(iii) Assume responsibility for
property damage it sustains, resulting
from permitted activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e);
(iv) Extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility to its
contractors and subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against the space
flight participant, and to agree to be
responsible, for any property damage
they sustain and for any bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault; and
(v) Extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility to its
contractors and subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against the space
flight participant, and to agree to be
responsible, for any property damage
they sustain, resulting from permitted
activities, regardless of fault.
(e) For each licensed or permitted
activity in which the United States or its
contractors and subcontractors is
involved, the Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of
Transportation and each crew member
must enter into or have in place a
reciprocal waiver of claims agreement.
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The reciprocal waiver of claims must be
in the form set forth in appendix D of
this part, or in a form that otherwise
provides all the same obligations and
benefits.
(1) The reciprocal waiver of claims
must provide that each crew member:
(i) Waive and release claims he or she
may have against the United States, and
against each of its contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by the crew
member, resulting from licensed or
permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for bodily
injury or property damage, sustained by
the crew member, resulting from
licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault;
(iii) Hold harmless the United States,
and its contractors and subcontractors,
for bodily injury or property damage,
sustained by the crew member, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault; and
(iv) Hold harmless and indemnify the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss, or damage arising
out of claims brought by anyone for
property damage or bodily injury
sustained by the crew member, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities.
(2) The reciprocal waiver of claims
must provide that the United States:
(i) Waive and release claims it may
have against the crew member for
property damage it sustains, and for
bodily injury, including death, or
property damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from licensed or
permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for property
damage it sustains, and for bodily injury
or property damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise
have for such damage or injury exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c)
and (e), respectively;
(iii) Assume responsibility for
property damage it sustains, resulting
from permitted activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage exceed
the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e);
(iv) Extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility to its
contractors and subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against the crew
member and to agree to be responsible,
PO 00000
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for any property damage they sustain
and for any bodily injury or property
damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault; and
(v) Extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility to its
contractors and subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against the crew
member and to agree to be responsible,
for any property damage they sustain,
resulting from permitted activities,
regardless of fault.
(f) Any waiver, release, assumption of
responsibility or agreement to hold
harmless and indemnify pursuant to
this section does not apply to claims for
bodily injury or property damage
resulting from willful misconduct of any
of the parties to the reciprocal waiver of
claims, the contractors and
subcontractors of any of the parties to
the reciprocal waiver of claims, and in
the case of licensee or permittee and
customers and the contractors and
subcontractors of each of them, the
directors, officers, agents and employees
of any of the foregoing, and in the case
of the United States, its agents.
■ 4. Revise appendix B to part 440 to
read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 440—Agreement for
Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Licensed Activities
Part 1—Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Licensed Launch,
Including Suborbital Launch
Subpart A—Waiver of Claims and
Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Launch, Including Suborbital Launch, With
One Customer
This agreement is entered into thisllday
ofllll, by and among [Licensee] (the
‘‘Licensee’’), [Customer] (the ‘‘Customer’’)
and the Federal Aviation Administration of
the Department of Transportation, on behalf
of the United States Government
(collectively, the ‘‘Parties’’), to implement the
provisions of § 440.17(c) of the Commercial
Space Transportation Licensing Regulations,
14 CFR Ch. III (the ‘‘Regulations’’). This
agreement applies to the launch of [Payload]
payload on a [Launch Vehicle] vehicle at
[Location of Launch Site]. In consideration of
the mutual releases and promises contained
herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named
Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above-named Customer.
License means License No.llissued
onllll, by the Associate Administrator
for Commercial Space Transportation,
Federal Aviation Administration, Department
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of Transportation, to the Licensee, including
all license orders issued in connection with
the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any
transferee of the Licensee under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Licensed Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Customer, the
United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Licensee, the
United States, any other customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and Customer shall each be
responsible for Property Damage it sustains
and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
Licensee and Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the
United States, any other customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
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assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Customer, the United States,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a), respectively, to its
customers, Contractors, and Subcontractors,
by requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against Licensee, the
United States, and any other customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Licensee, the United States,
and any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by their own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for any Property Damage they
sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims they would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and
indemnify Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Licensee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
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55125
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States
and its agencies, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them; and any other customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them, from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that Customer’s
Contractors, Subcontractors, or customers,
may have for Property Damage sustained by
them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities and arising
out of the indemnifying party’s failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an
appropriations law or to the extent there is
enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the
United States shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee, Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and their respective directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims that Contractors and
Subcontractors of the United States may have
for Property Damage sustained by them, and
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to implement
properly the waiver requirement, to the
extent that claims they would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Licensee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
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7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Licensee,
Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Licensee, Customer or
the United States, respectively, including a
member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage,
resulting from Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Licensee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Licensee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
Subpart B—Waiver of Claims and
Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Launch, Including Suborbital Launch, With
More Than One Customer
This agreement is entered into thisllday
ofllll, by and among [Licensee] (the
‘‘Licensee’’); [List of Customers]; (with [List
of Customers] hereinafter referred to in their
individual capacity as ‘‘Customer’’); and the
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of
the United States Government (collectively,
the ‘‘Parties’’), to implement the provisions of
§ 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space
Transportation Licensing Regulations, 14
CFR Ch. III (the ‘‘Regulations’’). This
agreement applies to the launch of [Payload]
payload on a [Launch Vehicle] vehicle at
[Location of Launch Site].
In consideration of the mutual releases and
promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means each above-named
Customer.
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Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above-named Customer.
License means License No.llissued
onllll, by the Associate Administrator
for Commercial Space Transportation,
Federal Aviation Administration, Department
of Transportation, to the Licensee, including
all license orders issued in connection with
the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any
transferee of the Licensee under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Licensed Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against each Customer,
the United States, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
the United States, any other customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and each Customer shall each
be responsible for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault. Licensee and each Customer shall
each hold harmless and indemnify each
other, the United States, any other customer,
and the Contractors and Subcontractors of
each, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
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of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnification, as set
forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a),
respectively, to its customers, Contractors,
and Subcontractors, by requiring them to
waive and release all claims they may have
against Licensee, the United States, and any
other customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Licensee, the United States,
and any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for any Property Damage
they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims they would otherwise have for
such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and
indemnify each Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any part 440
customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
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liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Licensee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States
and its agencies, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them; and any other customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them, from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that each
Customer’s Contractors, Subcontractors, or
customers, may have for Property Damage
sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an
appropriations law or to the extent there is
enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the
United States shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee, each Customer, any Part
440 Customer, and their respective directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims that Contractors and
Subcontractors of the United States may have
for Property Damage sustained by them, and
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to implement
properly the waiver requirement, to the
extent that claims they would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Licensee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:00 Aug 17, 2016
Jkt 238001
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Licensee,
any Customer or the United States of any
claim by an employee of the Licensee, any
Customer or the United States, respectively,
including a member of the Armed Forces of
the United States, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Licensee,
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
the Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall
apply to, and be deemed to include, each
such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Licensee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer 1
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
[Signature lines for each additional customer]
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
Part 2—Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Licensed Reentry
Subpart A—Waiver of Claims and
Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Reentry With One Customer
This Agreement is entered into this ll
day of llll, by and among [Licensee]
(the ‘‘Licensee’’), [Customer] (the
‘‘Customer’’), and the Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of
Transportation, on behalf of the United States
Government (collectively, the ‘‘Parties’’), to
implement the provisions of § 440.17(c) of
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55127
the Commercial Space Transportation
Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the
‘‘Regulations’’). This agreement applies to the
reentry of the [Payload] payload on a
[Reentry Vehicle] vehicle.
In consideration of the mutual releases and
promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named
Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above named Customer.
License means License No. ll issued on
llll, by the Associate Administrator for
Commercial Space Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of
Transportation, to the Licensee, including all
license orders issued in connection with the
License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any
transferee of the Licensee under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Licensed Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Customer, the
United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Licensee, the
United States, any other customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and Customer shall each be
responsible for Property Damage it sustains
and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
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Licensee and Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the
United States, any other customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e) of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Customer, the United States,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a), respectively, to its
customers, Contractors, and Subcontractors,
by requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against Licensee, the
United States, and any other customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Licensee, the United States,
and any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for any Property Damage they
sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims they would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
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Jkt 238001
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and
indemnify Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Licensee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States
and its agencies, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them; and any other customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that Customer’s
Contractors, Subcontractors, or customers
may have for Property Damage sustained by
them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities and arising
out of the indemnifying party’s failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an
appropriations law or to the extent there is
enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the
United States shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee, Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and their respective directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims that Contractors and
Subcontractors of the United States may have
for Property Damage sustained by them, and
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to implement
properly the waiver requirement, to the
extent that claims they would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e) of the Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Licensee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Licensee,
Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Licensee, Customer or
the United States, respectively, including a
member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage,
resulting from Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Licensee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In Witness Whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Licensee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
Subpart B—Waiver of Claims and
Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Reentry With More Than One Customer
This agreement is entered into this ll
day of llll, by and among [Licensee]
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(the ‘‘Licensee’’); [List of Customers] (with
[List of Customers] hereinafter referred to in
their individual capacity as ‘‘Customer’’); and
the Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of
the United States Government (collectively,
the ‘‘Parties’’), to implement the provisions of
§ 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space
Transportation Licensing Regulations, 14
CFR Ch. III (the ‘‘Regulations’’). This
agreement applies to the reentry of [Payload]
payload on a [Reentry Vehicle] vehicle.
In consideration of the mutual releases and
promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities described in § 440.3 of the
Regulations.
Customer means each above-named
Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above-named customer.
License means License No. ll issued on
llll, by the Associate Administrator for
Commercial Space Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of
Transportation, to the Licensee, including all
license orders issued in connection with the
License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any
transferee of the Licensee under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Licensed Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against each Customer,
the United States, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
the United States, any other customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Licensee,
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:00 Aug 17, 2016
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3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and each Customer shall each
be responsible for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault. Licensee and each Customer shall
each hold harmless and indemnify each
other, the United States, any other customer,
and the Contractors and Subcontractors of
each, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault, to the
extent that claims it would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnification, as set
forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a),
respectively, to its customers, Contractors,
and Subcontractors, by requiring them to
waive and release all claims they may have
against Licensee, the United States, and any
other customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Licensee, the United States,
and any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for any Property Damage
PO 00000
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55129
they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims they would otherwise have for
such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and
indemnify each Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Licensee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and the United
States and any other customer as defined by
§ 440.3 its agencies, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them; and any other customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any
of them, from and against liability, loss or
damage arising out of claims that each
Customer’s Contractors, Subcontractors, and
customers, may have for Property Damage
sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an
appropriations law or to the extent there is
enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the
United States shall hold harmless and
indemnify Licensee, each Customer, any Part
440 Customer, and their respective directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims that Contractors and
Subcontractors of the United States may have
for Property Damage sustained by them, and
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party’s failure to implement
properly the waiver requirement, to the
extent that claims they would otherwise have
for such damage or injury exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Licensee shall
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 160 / Thursday, August 18, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Licensee,
any Customer or the United States of any
claim by an employee of the Licensee, any
Customer or the United States, respectively,
including a member of the Armed Forces of
the United States, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customers, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Licensee,
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
the Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall
apply to, and be deemed to include, each
such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Licensee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer 1
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
[Signature lines for each additional customer]
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Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
5. Revise appendix C to part 440 to
read as follows:
■
Appendix C to Part 440—Agreement for
Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities
Part 1—Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities With
No Customer
This agreement is entered into this ll
day of llll, by and between [Permittee]
(the ‘‘Permittee’’) and the Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of
Transportation, on behalf of the United States
Government (collectively, the ‘‘Parties’’), to
implement the provisions of § 440.17(c) of
the Commercial Space Transportation
Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the
‘‘Regulations’’). This agreement applies to
[describe permitted activity]. In
consideration of the mutual releases and
promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Permit means Permit No._______issued on
____________, by the Associate Administrator
for Commercial Space Transportation,
Federal Aviation Administration, Department
of Transportation, to the Permittee, including
all permit orders issued in connection with
the Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit
issued under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Permitted Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against the United States,
and against its Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Permittee
and against its Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
it would otherwise have for such damage
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee shall be responsible for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its
own employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault. Permittee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States, and the Contractors and
Subcontractors of the United States, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault,
to the extent that claims it would otherwise
have for such damage exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against the United States, and
against the Contractors and Subcontractors of
the United States, and to agree to be
responsible for Property Damage they sustain
and to be responsible, hold harmless, and
indemnify the United States, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Permittee, and against the Contractors and
Subcontractors of Permittee, and to agree to
be responsible, for any Property Damage they
sustain, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage
exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
Permittee shall hold harmless and
indemnify the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss, or damage arising out of claims
that Permittee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and
indemnify Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
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Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Permittee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Permittee and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any other
customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Customer’s Contractors, Subcontractors,
and customers, may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Permittee
or the United States of any claim by an
employee of the Permittee or the United
States, respectively, including a member of
the Armed Forces of the United States, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting
from Permitted Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility, or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, and in the case of Permittee and its
Contractors and Subcontractors, the
directors, officers, agents, and employees of
any of the foregoing, and in the case of the
United States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Permittee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
Part 2—Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities With
One Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day
of ____, by and among [Permittee] (the
‘‘Permittee’’), [Customer] (the ‘‘Customer’’)
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Jkt 238001
and the Federal Aviation Administration of
the Department of Transportation, on behalf
of the United States Government
(collectively, the ‘‘Parties’’), to implement the
provisions of § 440.17(c) of the Commercial
Space Transportation Licensing Regulations,
14 CFR Ch. III (the ‘‘Regulations’’). This
agreement applies to [describe permitted
activity]. In consideration of the mutual
releases and promises contained herein, the
Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named
Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above-named customer.
Permit means Permit No. __ issued on
____, by the Associate Administrator for
Commercial Space Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of
Transportation, to the Permittee, including
all permit orders issued in connection with
the Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit
issued under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Permitted Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Customer, the
United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against Permittee, the
United States, any other customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Permittee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
it would otherwise have for such damage or
injury exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee and Customer shall each be
responsible for Property Damage it sustains
and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting
PO 00000
Frm 00021
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
55131
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
Permittee and Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the
United States, any other customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault,
to the extent that claims it would otherwise
have for such damage exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Customer, the United States,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a), respectively, to its
customers, Contractors, and Subcontractors,
by requiring them to waive and release all
claims they may have against Permittee, the
United States, any other customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Permittee, the United States,
any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Permittee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for any Property Damage they
sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage
or injury exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
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5. Indemnification
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and
indemnify Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Permittee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Permittee and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any other
customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Customer’s Contractors, Subcontractors,
and customers, may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Permittee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Permittee,
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:00 Aug 17, 2016
Jkt 238001
Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Permittee, Customer
or the United States, respectively, including
a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage,
resulting from Permitted Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Permittee,
Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the
Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Permittee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Associate Administrator for Commercial
Space Transportation
Part 3—Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities With
More Than One Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day
of ____, by and among [Permittee] (the
‘‘Permittee’’); [List of Customers]; (with [List
of Customers] hereinafter referred to in their
individual capacity as ‘‘Customer’’); and the
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of
the United States Government (collectively,
the ‘‘Parties’’), to implement the provisions of
§ 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space
Transportation Licensing Regulations, 14
CFR Ch. III (the ‘‘Regulations’’). This
agreement applies to [describe permitted
activity].
In consideration of the mutual releases and
promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means
entities defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means each above-named
Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer
defined by § 440.3 of the Regulations, other
than the above-named Customer.
Permit means Permit No. __ issued on
____, by the Associate Administrator for
PO 00000
Frm 00022
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Commercial Space Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of
Transportation, to the Permittee, including
all permit orders issued in connection with
the Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit
issued under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and
its agencies involved in Permitted Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51
U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509—Commercial
Space Launch Activities, or in the
Regulations, shall have the same meaning as
contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or
the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases
claims it may have against each Customer,
the United States, any Part 440 Customer,
and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Permittee,
the United States, any other customer, and
each of their Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Property Damage it sustains and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by its own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and
releases claims it may have against Permittee,
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
it would otherwise have for such damage or
injury exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee and each Customer shall each
be responsible for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault. Permittee and each
Customer shall each hold harmless and
indemnify each other, the United States, any
other customer, and the Contractors and
Subcontractors of each, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible
for Property Damage it sustains, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault,
to the extent that claims it would otherwise
have for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility
and Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements
of the waiver and release of claims, and the
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assumption of responsibility, hold harmless,
and indemnification, as set forth in
paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring
them to waive and release all claims they
may have against each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnification, as set
forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a),
respectively, to its customers, Contractors,
and Subcontractors, by requiring them to
waive and release all claims they may have
against Permittee, the United States, any
other customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for Property Damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify Permittee, the United States,
any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the
requirements of the waiver and release of
claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b),
respectively, to its Contractors and
Subcontractors by requiring them to waive
and release all claims they may have against
Permittee, each Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree
to be responsible, for any Property Damage
they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims they would otherwise have for
such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(c) and
(e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and
indemnify each Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any Part 440
Customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that Permittee’s Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by their
employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
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15:00 Aug 17, 2016
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party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and
indemnify Permittee and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the
United States and its agencies, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; and any other
customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that each Customer’s Contractors,
Subcontractors, and customers, may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by their employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying
party’s failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, Permittee shall
hold harmless and indemnify the United
States and its agencies, servants, agents,
employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage
arising out of claims for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the
extent that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b)
of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by
the United States or its Contractors and
Subcontractors exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under § 440.9(e) of
the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under
§ 440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not
exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such
amount, and are payable pursuant to the
provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and § 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no
liability for claims exceeding $1,500,000,000
(as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility
required under § 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be
construed as a waiver or release by Permittee,
any Customer or the United States of any
claim by an employee of the Permittee, any
Customer or the United States, respectively,
including a member of the Armed Forces of
the United States, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage, resulting from Permitted
Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this
Agreement to the contrary, any waiver,
release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify
herein shall not apply to claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage resulting from
willful misconduct of any of the Parties, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any of the
Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the
Contractors and Subcontractors of any Part
440 Customer, and in the case of Permittee,
PO 00000
Frm 00023
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
55133
each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
the Contractors and Subcontractors of each of
them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the
case of the United States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall
apply to, and be deemed to include, each
such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by
and construed in accordance with United
States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this
Agreement have caused the Agreement to be
duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date
written above.
Permittee
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Customer 1
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
[Signature lines for each additional
customer]
Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation on Behalf of
the United States Government
By: lllllllllllllllllll
Its: lllllllllllllllllll
Issued under authority provided by 49
U.S.C. 106(f), 44701(a), and 44703 in
Washington, DC, on July 25, 2016.
Michael P. Huerta,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016–18765 Filed 8–17–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Parts 1, 301, and 602
[TD 9782]
RIN 1545–BK06
Tax on Certain Foreign Procurement
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Final regulations.
AGENCY:
This document contains final
regulations under section 5000C of the
Internal Revenue Code relating to the 2
percent tax on payments made by the
U.S. government to foreign persons
pursuant to certain contracts. The
regulations affect U.S. government
acquiring agencies and foreign persons
providing certain goods or services to
the U.S. government pursuant to a
contract. This document also contains
final regulations under section 6114,
with respect to foreign persons claiming
an exemption from the 2 percent tax
under an income tax treaty.
DATES: Effective Date: These regulations
are effective on August 18, 2016.
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\18AUR1.SGM
18AUR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 160 (Thursday, August 18, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 55115-55133]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-18765]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 440
[Docket No.: FAA-2014-1012; Amdt. No. 440-4]
RIN 2120-AK44
Reciprocal Waivers of Claims for Licensed or Permitted Launch and
Reentry Activities
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FAA is amending its commercial space regulations governing
reciprocal waivers of claims to require that customers waive claims
against all the customers involved in a launch or reentry, including
those signing a different set of reciprocal waivers. Also, customers of
a customer contracting directly with a licensee or permittee will not
have to sign a waiver directly with the licensee or permittee, other
customers, or the FAA. The FAA is also adding an appendix to provide
permittees with an example of a Waiver of Claims and Assumption of
Responsibility for Permitted Activities with No Customer.
[[Page 55116]]
DATES: Effective October 17, 2016.
ADDRESSES: For information on where to obtain copies of rulemaking
documents and other information related to this final rule, see ``How
To Obtain Additional Information'' in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions concerning this rule,
contact Shirley McBride, Regulations Program Lead, AST-300, Office of
Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation Administration, 800
Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591; telephone (202) 267-
7470; email Shirley.McBride@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Authority for This Rulemaking
The Commercial Space Launch Act of 1984, as amended at 51 U.S.C.
50901-50923 (Chapter 509), authorizes the Department of Transportation
and thus the FAA, through delegations, to oversee, license, and
regulate commercial launch and reentry activities, and the operation of
launch and reentry sites as carried out by U.S. citizens or within the
United States. 51 U.S.C. 50904, 50905. The Act directs the FAA to
exercise this responsibility consistent with public health and safety,
safety of property, and the national security and foreign policy
interests of the United States. 51 U.S.C. 50905. Section 50901(a)(7)
directs the FAA to regulate only to the extent necessary, in relevant
part, to protect the public health and safety and safety of property.
The FAA is also responsible for encouraging, facilitating, and
promoting commercial space launches by the private sector. 51 U.S.C.
50903.
Chapter 509 requires that, for each commercial space launch or
reentry, the Department of Transportation (DOT) and, through
delegation, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) enter into a
reciprocal waiver of claims agreement with ``the licensee or
transferee, contractors, subcontractors, crew, space flight
participants, and customers of the licensee or transferee, and
contractors and subcontractors of the customers. . . .'' 51 U.S.C.
50914(b)(2). This requirement also applies to permittees under 51
U.S.C. 50906(i).
I. Overview of Final Rule
This rule revises part 440 in the following ways: (1) Amends Sec.
440.17 to describe fully the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements
applicable to the relevant appendices; (2) amends Sec. 440.17 and
updates appendices B and C so that customers of any customer
contracting directly with a licensee or permittee do not have to sign a
waiver directly with the licensee or permittee, other customers, or the
FAA; (3) amends Sec. 440.17 and updates appendices B and C of part 440
so that customers waive claims, as required by statute, against all the
customers involved in the launch or reentry, including those signing a
different set of reciprocal waivers; (4) amends Sec. 440.3 to add a
definition of ``first-tier customer'' and ``part 440 customer''; and
(5) adds an appendix to provide licensees with an example of a Waiver
of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Permitted Activities
with No Customer.
These changes will result in cost savings to the licensee,
government and customers, and minimal cost to any customer in a direct
contractual relationship with the licensee or permittee if it has
customers to the launch. This rule does not address changes to the
reciprocal waiver of claims created by the U.S. Commercial Space Launch
Competitiveness Act, P.L. 114-90 (2015). Those changes will be
addressed by a future rulemaking.
II. Background
On January 13, 2015, the FAA published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM), ``Reciprocal Waivers of Claims for Licensed or
Permitted Launch and Reentry Activities,'' 80 FR 1590, proposing to
amend the FAA's regulations regarding reciprocal waivers of claims
agreements. The NPRM also discussed the potential burden the reciprocal
waivers of claims requirements may impose on licensees and permittees
launching hosted payloads. The comment period closed on March 16, 2015.
On June 15, 2015, the FAA reopened the comment period for 30 days
because the regulatory evaluation was not posted to the docket prior to
the close of the NPRM's comment period. This second comment period was
limited to comments on the regulatory evaluation only, and closed on
July 15, 2015. The FAA received five comments on the NPRM and no
comments on the regulatory evaluation.
III. Discussion of Final Rule and Public Comments
The FAA received comments from five entities, including launch
operators, service providers, and one individual. Launch operators who
provided comments are Blue Origin, LLC (Blue Origin), Lockheed Martin
Corporation (Lockheed), and Space Exploration Technologies Corporation
(SpaceX). Harris Corporation (Harris) and an individual also commented.
In general, the commenters supported the proposed requirements. A
few commenters suggested changes to the proposed regulatory text in
order to achieve the FAA's proposed outcome. After careful
consideration of the comments, the FAA generally adopts the provisions
as proposed, but makes the following changes. The FAA amends Sec.
440.17(b) and (c) and part 440, appendices B and C, to include part 440
customers and their contractors and subcontractors in the reciprocal
waiver of claims scheme. The FAA adds Sec. 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) to
preserve the statutory and regulatory requirements that all customers
waive claims against all the other parties involved in the licensed
permitted activity. Lastly, the FAA removes permittees from the
indemnification scheme reserved by statute for licensees only, thereby
maintaining the scope of the indemnification scheme as set out in 51
U.S.C. 50915.
A. First-Tier and Part 440 Customers
As originally proposed, Sec. 440.17(c) is amended to require the
FAA, the licensee or permittee, and each first-tier customer to enter
into a reciprocal waiver of claims agreement for each licensed or
permitted activity in which the U.S. Government, any agency, or its
contractors and subcontractors are involved, or where property
insurance is required under Sec. 440.9(d). Additionally, as proposed,
Sec. 440.3 is amended to define the terms ``first-tier customer'' and
``part 440 customer.'' A first-tier customer is one who satisfies the
definition of a customer and has a contractual relationship with a
license or permit holder to obtain launch or reentry services. A part
440 customer means one who satisfies the regulatory definition of a
customer and who is not a first-tier customer. Blue Origin requested
that the FAA clarify how a licensee or permittee should identify its
customers under the proposed rule. The FAA adopts these provisions as
proposed, and provides further clarification below.
Blue Origin requested clarification on how the requirement to enter
into a reciprocal waiver of claims agreement with each first-tier
customer would apply to a situation in which a first-tier customer was
a single entity representing a group of persons. Blue Origin stated
that it ``interprets the proposal to require that only the single
entity representing the group will be required to sign a reciprocal
waiver with the licensee/permittee and FAA.'' \1\ Blue Origin also
requested that the FAA
[[Page 55117]]
confirm that ``if a first-tier customer is a single entity representing
a group of persons, the licensee/permittee is required to enter into a
cross waiver of claims only with a representative of the group as the
first-tier customer.'' \2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Blue Origin Comment at 2.
\2\ Blue Origin Comment at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An entity's status as the representative of a group is not the
determining factor as to whether or not that entity is required to sign
a reciprocal waiver with the licensee or permittee and the FAA. Rather,
a licensee or permittee is only required to enter into a reciprocal
waiver with customers with whom it is in a contractual relationship.
To determine the entities with which it must execute a reciprocal
waiver, the licensee or permittee should determine what entities it has
contracted with for the licensed or permitted activity who also qualify
as customers under 14 CFR 440.3. Accordingly, if a licensee entered
into a contract with a number of entities for launch or reentry
services, it would enter into reciprocal waivers with each of them.
Blue Origin provided a hypothetical scenario in which a school,
university research lab, or other educational institution represented a
group of students that contributed to the development of a payload. In
this hypothetical situation, the single entity representing the group
may be the only entity required to sign a reciprocal waiver with the
licensee or permittee and the FAA. However, the hypothetical entity
would be the only entity required to sign the reciprocal waiver only if
it was the only entity in a contractual relationship with the licensee
or permittee, and therefore the only entity who would qualify as a
first-tier customer.\3\ In that case, the representative would be the
only first-tier customer and, therefore, the only party required to
sign the reciprocal waiver of claims with the licensee or permittee and
the FAA. If, however, any other member of the group was also in a
direct contractual relationship with the licensee or permittee and also
met the FAA's definition of customer under Sec. 440.3, that member
would also be a first-tier customer and would also be required to sign
a reciprocal waiver of claims with the licensee or permittee and the
FAA. It would not, however, have to sign with all other first-tier
customers because this final rule ensures that customers waive claims
against all other customers involved in a launch or reentry, including
those signing different reciprocal waivers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The FAA assumes for purposes of this hypothetical that the
entity representing the group meets the FAA's definition of customer
in 14 CFR 440.3, by, for example, being the one who procures the
launch.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Blue Origin also expressed concern regarding how a licensee or
permittee will determine who its customers are. Specifically, Blue
Origin pointed out that determining whether each party has an interest
in the payload is complicated by the fact that ``people have varying
levels of involvement (e.g., a student works an entire semester on a
project, vs. one who works a few hours), or have left the group (e.g.,
some students graduate prior to completion of a payload, and are
replaced by other students).'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Blue Origin Comment at 2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA is not changing the definition of ``customer'' under Sec.
440.3 in this rulemaking. However, the burden of identifying part 440
customers does shift with this rule, not to the licensee or permittee
as Blue Origin suggests, but to the appropriate first-tier customer.
This is because under this rule a licensee or permittee is responsible
for implementing a reciprocal waiver of claims only with those
customers with whom it is in a direct contractual relationship. A
first-tier customer, as a result of this rule, will be responsible for
implementing a reciprocal waiver of claims with each of its customers.
Although it is not changing the definition of customer under Sec.
440.3, the FAA reiterates what it has said about the definition of
customer in previous rulemakings. In its 1996 rulemaking, the FAA
pointed out that it construes the term customer in proposed Sec. 440.3
more broadly than just ``the party that actually contracts with the
commercial launch services provider and prospective licensee.'' \5\ The
1996 NPRM provided the example of a customer who had placed its
property on board the payload in order to receive an on-orbit service,
such as microgravity experiments, and stated that such an entity would
be considered a customer to the launch even though it did not procure
the launch.\6\ In the final rule that resulted from the 1996 NPRM, the
FAA stated: ``The definition of `customer' is further modified in the
final rule to include any person who places property on board a payload
for the purpose of obtaining launch or payload services . . . .'' \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Financial Responsibility Requirements for Licensed Launch
Activities, NPRM, 61 FR 38992, 39002 (July 25, 1996).
\6\ Financial Responsibility, 61 FR at 39002.
\7\ Financial Responsibility Requirements for Licensed Launch
Activities, Final Rule, 63 FR 45592, 45607 (August 26, 1998).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA's definition of customer, therefore, as applied to Blue
Origin's hypothetical, would be based on ownership rights in the
payload rather than the level of involvement in developing the payload.
For example, a person may build a payload and sell it to a company. The
company may then place that payload on board a rocket. The builder has
no ownership rights in the payload, and therefore would not be a
customer under Sec. 440.3. The company who purchased, and therefore
owns the payload, would be a customer under Sec. 440.3. The person
facing financial exposure for failing to properly identify these other
non-signing customers would be the first-tier customer.
B. Government Customers
A Government customer need not sign a reciprocal waiver of claims
because the FAA signs the reciprocal waiver of claims on behalf of the
Government. Although, the proposed rule did not mention Government
customers, Harris Corporation requested clarification on the treatment
of Government-hosted payload customers on commercial payloads launched
pursuant to Chapter 509. The FAA makes no change based on this comment.
Specifically, Harris asked whether the FAA would sign the waiver
form on behalf of a Government customer, whether a Government customer
could be considered a part 440 customer, and whether a Government
customer's contractor would be considered a contractor of the United
States for purposes of Sec. 440.14(c). As the agency has stated in
previous rulemakings, ``[w]hen the licensee's customer is a U.S.
Government agency, the agency is treated the same as any
nongovernmental customer for purposes of determining the appropriate
amount of property insurance required of the licensee and in terms of
the U.S. Government's waiver of claims or property damage or less above
the required amount of property insurance under [51 U.S.C.
50914(b)(2)]. That is, a Government payload is not covered by the
required Government property insurance and the United States Government
agency-customer accepts responsibility for property damage to the
payload.'' \8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Financial Responsibility, 61 FR at 39001.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because the FAA signs on behalf of the U.S. Government, any
Government customer would not separately sign any reciprocal waiver of
claims. The designation as a part 440 customer does not change a
customer's responsibilities under the reciprocal waivers of claims, it
only affects with whom the customer must sign a reciprocal waiver of
claims. A Government customer's status as a first-tier or part 440
customer does not
[[Page 55118]]
matter, because the FAA signs on behalf of the Government.
As to Harris' last question concerning whether a contractor of a
Government customer would be considered a contractor of the United
States for purposes of Sec. 440.14(c), it is beyond the scope of the
current rulemaking. Additionally, the FAA notes that Sec. 440.14(c) is
not currently a regulatory provision.
C. Extension of the Reciprocal Waivers of Claims Requirements
The FAA intended to amend only the method by which the obligations
under the reciprocal waiver of claims were extended. Rather than
requiring the licensee or permittee to implement the reciprocal waiver
of claims with its contractors, subcontractors, customers, and
customers' contractors and subcontractors, this rule requires that each
customer extend the reciprocal waiver of claims to its contractors and
subcontractors. Although it did not receive comment on the issue, the
FAA adds the extension of the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements
to Sec. 440.17(b) to require the licensee or permittee, each first-
tier customer, and each part 440 customer to extend the requirements to
their respective contractors and subcontractors. Therefore, and as
discussed below, a part 440 customer must waive and release claims,
assume responsibility, hold harmless, and indemnify other parties
identified in the waiver as a result of both the explicit requirement
in Sec. 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) and the extension of the reciprocal
waiver of claims requirements in Sec. 440.17(c)(2) and (c)(1)(iii).
Additionally, the FAA adds language to Sec. 440.17(c)(2)(i), (ii),
and (iii), and the associated part 440 appendices specifying that a
party to a reciprocal waiver of claims must agree in that waiver to
indemnify another party to the agreement from claims by the
indemnifying party's contractors, subcontractors, and in the case of
the customer, customers, arising out of the indemnifying party's
failure to correctly extend the reciprocal waiver of claims
requirement. This change was contemplated by the proposed rule, and
preserves the requirements of this section prior to the amendments
included in this final rule.
1. Extension of Reciprocal Waiver of Claims to Part 440 Customers'
Contractors and Subcontractors
SpaceX commented that the proposed rule did not effectively extend
the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements to a part 440 customer's
contractors and subcontractors such that those contractors and
subcontractors waived claims against all other parties otherwise
protected by the reciprocal waiver of claims. SpaceX also commented
that the appendices should be adjusted to state that a first-tier
customer indemnifies the appropriate parties from and against
liability, loss, or damage arising out of any claim brought by its
customer's contractors and subcontractors. Harris commented that Sec.
440.17(b) should be revised to include part 440 customers and their
contractors and subcontractors in the waiver scheme to ensure that the
parties to the reciprocal waiver of claims waive claims against them.
In this rule the FAA changes Sec. 440.17 to apply to part 440
customers' contractors and subcontractors, but does not adopt SpaceX's
proposed language for the appendices. This marks a change from the
regulatory text that the FAA originally proposed, based on comments
discussed below.
SpaceX recommended additions to proposed Sec. 440.17 and the
associated appendices ``to ensure that the regulations maintain the
current obligations of all customers' contractors and subcontractors
with respect to the licensee/permittee.'' \9\ SpaceX stated that
although the proposed rule might streamline the reciprocal waiver of
claims process, ``it does not expressly provide the same protections to
the licensee or permittee contained in the current rule.'' \10\
Specifically, SpaceX argued that, under the proposed rule, the licensee
or permittee would have been required to waive and release any claims
it might have against a part 440 customer and its contractors and
subcontractors, but a part 440 customer's contractors and
subcontractors would not have been required to waive claims against all
other parties to which the reciprocal waiver requirements extended.
SpaceX also noted that the contractors and subcontractors of a part 440
customer were not accounted for in proposed Sec. 440.17 or in proposed
sections 4(b) and 5(b) of the part 440 appendices in the same way as
under the current rules. SpaceX provided suggested language to address
what it saw as inconsistencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ SpaceX comment p. 1
\10\ SpaceX comment at p. 2
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, the FAA has decided to make changes
to the regulatory text to preserve the intent of this rulemaking and
Chapter 509. Accordingly, Sec. 440.17(b) and (c) require that each
customer extends the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements to the
customer's contractors and subcontractors. The reciprocal waiver of
claims requires that the contractors and subcontractors of each
customer waive and release claims, assume responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnify other parties identified in the waiver,
including the licensee or permittee. This rule explicitly requires the
licensee or permittee, each first-tier customer, and each part 440
customer to extend the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements to
their contractors, subcontractors and customers.
The FAA notes, however, that SpaceX recommended changing the text
in each of the appendices to part 440 at section 4(b) to read:
``Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver . . .
respectively, to its Contractors, Subcontractors, customers, and such
customers' contractors and subcontractors . . . .'' The FAA is not
adopting this suggested change for two reasons. First, this suggested
language misappropriates the responsibility to extend the reciprocal
waiver of claims requirements. Under SpaceX's proposed language, each
first-tier customer would be required to extend the reciprocal waiver
of claims requirements to its customers' contractors and
subcontractors. Instead, this rule requires each customer to extend the
reciprocal waiver of claims requirements to its contractors and
subcontractors, but not to its customers' contractors and
subcontractors. This is consistent with the previous version of the
part 440 appendices. Second, this language is unnecessary because the
extension of responsibilities in Sec. 440.17(b)(2) and (3) and
(c)(1)(iii) created by this rulemaking ensure that a part 440 customer
extends to the customer's contractors and subcontractors the
requirements of the reciprocal waiver of claims, which include waiving
and releasing claims, assuming responsibility, and holding harmless and
indemnifying other parties identified in the waiver,\11\ because a
first-tier customer must extend the waiver requirements to its
customer. In other words, the requirements work as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ See, e.g., 80 FR 1590, 1600 (extending the assumption of
responsibility and waiver and release of claims for a licensed
launch with one customer).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(1) Under Sec. 440.17 and the part 440 appendices, a first-tier
customer must waive and release claims, assume responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnify other parties identified in the waiver, as set
forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(a) of the appendices. Additionally, a
first-tier customer must extend each of these requirements to its
[[Page 55119]]
contractors, subcontractors, and customers.
(2) Because a first-tier customer must extend the requirements of
the waiver, including the requirement to extend the waiver, to its
customers, it follows that its customers will have the same obligation
as a first-tier customer under the waiver.
(3) Therefore, because of the extension of responsibilities, a
first-tier customer's customers will be required, in turn, to extend
the waiver requirements to their contractors, subcontractors and
customers. Additionally, Sec. 440.17(b)(3) and (c)(1)(iii) explicitly
require that each part 440 customer extends the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to its contractors and subcontractors.
Therefore, the FAA does not need to amend section 4(b) of the
appendices to ensure that part 440 customers extend the waiver
requirements to their contractors and subcontractors. Section
440.17(b)(2) and (3) and (c)(1)(iii) and section 4(b) of the appendices
already require this. The FAA also disagrees with SpaceX's suggestion
to amend section 5(b) of the appendices to require that a first-tier
customer indemnify the appropriate parties from and against liability,
loss, or damage arising out of any claim brought by its customer's
contractors and subcontractors. Adopting SpaceX's suggestion would
place an additional burden of indemnification on a first-tier customer
that did not previously exist in part 440. Previous part 440 appendices
required only that a first-tier customer indemnify the appropriate
parties from and against liability, loss, or damage arising out of
certain claims brought by its contractors, subcontractors, and
employees. SpaceX's proposed language would additionally require a
first-tier customer to indemnify from claims brought by its customer's
contractors, subcontractors, and employees. As explained above, a
first-tier customer is required to extend the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to its customers. As a result of this extension, a
first-tier customer's customer, rather than the first-tier customer
himself, is required to indemnify against certain claims brought by its
contractors, subcontractors, and employees.
Lastly, Harris pointed out that the absence of part 440 customers
and their contractors and subcontractors in proposed Sec. 440.17(b)
exposes these parties to liability that represents a departure from
Chapter 509. The FAA agrees, and this rule requires parties to the
reciprocal waiver of claims described in Sec. 440.17(b) to waive
claims against part 440 customers and their contractors and
subcontractors.
2. Extension of Reciprocal Waiver of Claims to Part 440 Customers
In its comment, Harris also noted that the FAA overlooked
explicitly requiring each part 440 customer to comply with the
reciprocal waiver of claims requirements. Therefore, the FAA now adds
an explicit requirement in addition to the extension of requirements
provisions in order to clarify that each part 440 customer must enter
into a reciprocal waiver of claims agreement. This marks a change from
the regulatory text that the FAA originally proposed.
Harris commented that proposed Sec. 440.17(b) and (c) would not
have ensured that part 440 customers waive claims against the other
parties included in the waiver scheme. Harris further asserted that the
purpose behind the waiver scheme is ``(1) [t]o limit the total universe
of claims that might arise as a result of a launch; and (2) to
eliminate the necessity for all of these parties to obtain property and
casualty insurance to protect against these claims.'' \12\
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\12\ Commercial Space Launch Act Amendments of 1988, Report of
the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation on
H.R. 4399, S. Rep. No. 100-593 at 14 (Oct. 7, 1988).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FAA agrees. Under Chapter 509 and the FAA's current rules, the
licensee or permittee is required to enter into a reciprocal waiver of
claims with all customers and their respective contractors and
subcontractors involved in launch or reentry services. In other words,
each customer must waive and release claims, assume responsibility,
hold harmless, and indemnify other parties identified in the waiver. In
the NPRM, the FAA proposed to require only first-tier customers to sign
a reciprocal waiver of claims with the FAA and the licensee or
permittee. By separating first-tier customers from part 440 customers,
the proposed rule did not explicitly require part 440 customers to
waive and release claims, assume responsibility, hold harmless, and
indemnify other parties identified in the waiver. Instead, these
requirements were implied by the extension of requirements in which a
first-tier customer is required to extend the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to its customers, contractors, and subcontractors.
Because commenters expressed some confusion about the requirements, the
FAA amends Sec. 440.17(b) and adds Sec. 440.17(c)(1)(iii)(D) to
explicitly require that part 440 customers waive claims against all the
other parties involved in the licensed activity.
As stated previously, these requirements levied on part 440
customers also exist as a result of the extension of the reciprocal
waiver of claims that is required by Sec. 440.17(b)(2), (b)(3), and
(c)(1)(iii). By shifting the responsibility to extend the reciprocal
waiver of claims from the licensee or permittee to the appropriate
customer, the burden to indemnify also shifts. Therefore, should a
customer fail to extend the reciprocal waiver of claims requirements to
its customer, and its customer bring a claim against a party involved
in the launch, the customer who failed to extend would be required to
indemnify that party against its customer's claim. This represents a
shift from the old scheme in which all customers signed the reciprocal
waiver of claims, and therefore no one would be required to indemnify
against a customer's claim unless the licensee failed to identify a
customer and ensure that that customer signed the reciprocal waiver of
claims.
D. Removal of Permittees From Indemnification Scheme
This rule does not change the indemnification scheme created by 51
U.S.C. 50915. Chapter 509 provides that the United States Government
shall pay for a successful third party claim to the extent the claim
exceeds the insurance coverage required by statute but does not exceed
the statutory limit for such coverage, provided Congress appropriates
the funds.\13\ Chapter 509 also lists the persons against whom the
claim may be brought in order to qualify for this coverage.\14\ This
list includes licensees, but does not include permittees. Therefore,
Congress will not appropriate funds for a third party claim against a
permittee that exceeds the insurance requirements in Chapter 509.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ 51 U.S.C. 50915(a)(1).
\14\ 51 U.S.C. 50915(a)(3)(A).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although it received no comments on the issue, the FAA has
identified an error in the proposed rule that it corrects with the
final rule. In the proposed rule, the FAA would have included
permittees in the indemnification scheme reserved by statute for
licensees only. Because this error would create a conflict with the
FAA's statutory authority, which the FAA did not intend, the FAA has
amended the regulatory text in this final rule to comply with Chapter
509 by removing permittees from the section 50915 indemnification
scheme.
[[Page 55120]]
E. Miscellaneous
This rule includes a new Sec. 440.17(f) to include all provisions
related to willful misconduct. The NPRM did not propose changing the
willful misconduct provisions, and this rule also does not change those
provisions but located them in Sec. 440.17(f) for clarity.
IV. Regulatory Notices and Analyses
A. Regulatory Evaluation
Changes to Federal regulations must undergo several economic
analyses. First, Executive Order 12866 and Executive Order 13563 direct
that each Federal agency shall propose or adopt a regulation only upon
a reasoned determination that the benefits of the intended regulation
justify its costs. Second, the Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(Public Law 96-354) requires agencies to analyze the economic impact of
regulatory changes on small entities. Third, the Trade Agreements Act
(Public Law 96-39) prohibits agencies from setting standards that
create unnecessary obstacles to the foreign commerce of the United
States. In developing U.S. standards, this Trade Act requires agencies
to consider international standards and, where appropriate, that they
be the basis of U.S. standards. Fourth, the Unfunded Mandates Reform
Act of 1995 (Public Law 104-4) requires agencies to prepare a written
assessment of the costs, benefits, and other effects of proposed or
final rules that include a Federal mandate likely to result in the
expenditure by State, local, or tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million or more annually (adjusted
for inflation with base year of 1995). This portion of the preamble
summarizes the FAA's analysis of the economic impacts of this final
rule. We suggest readers seeking greater detail read the full
regulatory evaluation, a copy of which we have placed in the docket for
this rulemaking.
In conducting these analyses, FAA has determined that this final
rule: (1) Has benefits that justify its costs, (2) is not an
economically ``significant regulatory action'' as defined in section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866, (3) is not ``significant'' as defined in
DOT's Regulatory Policies and Procedures; (4) will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities;
(5) will not create unnecessary obstacles to the foreign commerce of
the United States; and (6) will not impose an unfunded mandate on
State, local, or tribal governments, or on the private sector by
exceeding the threshold identified above. These analyses are summarized
below. As we received no comments on the benefit cost methodology, we
used the same methodology here.
Total Benefits and Costs of This Rule
These changes will result in cost savings to the licensee or
permittee, Government and customers and minimal cost to the first-tier
customer if it has customers to the launch.
Cost savings are presented in the table below, which is discussed
in more detail in the paragraphs that follow.
Cost Savings from the Final Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
7% Present 3% Present
Average value cost value cost
savings savings
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Government Cost Savings......................................... $138,440 $97,232 $118,092
Licensee and Permittee Cost Savings:
No Longer Requesting Waivers................................ 136,282 95,716 116,251
No Longer Obtaining Part 440 Customer Signatures................ 17,035 11,965 14,531
Cost Savings from Allowing Signatures on Different Set of 365 256 311
Reciprocal Waiver of Claims....................................
-----------------------------------------------
Total estimated cost savings............................ 292,121 205,169 249,185
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Minor rounding occurs in summation.
The final rule might result in minimal costs to first-tier
customers who will be responsible for implementing reciprocal waivers
of claims with their customers.
Who Is Potentially Affected by This Rule?
Launch Licensees and Permittees
Federal Government
Customers of the Launch Licensees and Permittees
Assumptions
The following assumptions apply to the analysis:
Ten year time horizon
2013 dollars
Without the rule, the FAA will issue 4 partial waivers to the
reciprocal cross waiver requirement per year
Without the rule, a licensee or permittee will have to obtain
some signatures from part 440 customers on launches unless waivers have
been issued
Benefits of This Rule
The final rule will result in cost savings because licensees and
permittees will no longer have to obtain signatures of part 440
customers on the reciprocal waiver of claims. Cost savings may result
because licensees and permittees will not have to incur expenses to
obtain part 440 signatures or licensees and permittees will not seek
waivers from the FAA to the requirement that part 440 customers sign
the reciprocal waiver of claims. The estimated cost savings to the
licensee, permittee, and the Federal Government that will result were
indicated in the table above.
Also, the FAA estimated a small cost savings due to the final rule
allowing a customer added at the last minute to sign a new and separate
waiver of claims agreement.
Finally, the FAA expects minimal cost savings with the addition of
a template for permitted activities with no customer.
Costs of This Rule
The responsibility to obtain signatures of customers who are not in
a direct contractual relationship (i.e., part 440 customers) with the
licensee or permittee will shift under the final rule, from the
licensee or permittee to the appropriate first-tier customer. The FAA
expects the costs the first-tier customer will incur under the rule to
implement the reciprocal waiver of claims to be minimal because the
first-tier customer could modify the templates provided in appendices B
and C to part 440 and add them to the contract that it has with its
customers. The FAA thinks that this will be a one-time cost that could
be accomplished in a short period of time by the company's in-house
lawyers. In addition, customers are currently required to extend the
FAA reciprocal waiver of claims obligations to their
[[Page 55121]]
respective contractors and subcontractors, so the FAA does not expect
the changes to the NPRM to result in additional costs.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Determination
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-354) (RFA)
establishes ``as a principle of regulatory issuance that agencies shall
endeavor, consistent with the objectives of the rule and of applicable
statutes, to fit regulatory and informational requirements to the scale
of the businesses, organizations, and governmental jurisdictions
subject to regulation. To achieve this principle, agencies are required
to solicit and consider flexible regulatory proposals and to explain
the rationale for their actions to assure that such proposals are given
serious consideration.'' The RFA covers a wide-range of small entities,
including small businesses, not-for-profit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions.
Agencies must perform a review to determine whether a rule will
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. If the agency determines that it will, the agency must
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis as described in the RFA.
However, if an agency determines that a rule is not expected to
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities, section 605(b) of the RFA provides that the head of the
agency may so certify and a regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required. The certification must include a statement providing the
factual basis for this determination, and the reasoning should be
clear.
The FAA believes that this final rule will not have a significant
impact on a substantial number of entities because the rule will result
in cost savings and some minimal costs as described below. The FAA
solicited comments in the NPRM regarding the initial regulatory
flexibility analysis minimal cost determination, and received none. As
we made the same determination for the initial regulatory flexibility
analysis, we accept this determination for the final regulatory
flexibility analysis. The reasons for the minimal cost determination
are provided below.
Cost savings are expected because the licensee or permittee will no
longer have to request waivers or obtain part 440 customers'
signatures, nor have to reopen the original waivers to obtain
signatures if a party is added to the launch at the last minute.
However, there might be minimal costs to first-tier customers. The
responsibility to obtain signatures of customers who are not in a
direct contractual relationship (i.e., part 440 customers) with the
licensee or permittee will shift under the final rule, from the
licensee or permittee to the appropriate first-tier customer. This will
be a new requirement on the first-tier customer.
Under the final rule, the first-tier customers will be responsible,
as described above, for implementing a reciprocal waiver of claims with
their customers. These costs will be minimal because the first-tier
customer could modify the templates provided in appendices B and C to
part 440 and add it to the contract that it has with its customers. The
FAA thinks that this will be a one-time cost that could be accomplished
in a short period of time by the company's in-house lawyers at an
estimated cost of $185.
It is not clear whether this minimal cost will impact a substantial
number of small entities. To date, the FAA is unaware of any small
entities who would be affected. The agency does not know whether in the
future there might be small entities, that will have to implement a
reciprocal waiver of claims with their customers, but even if there
were a substantial number of small entities, the final rule will not
have a significant impact on these entities.
Therefore, as provided in section 605(b), the head of the FAA
certifies that this rulemaking will not result in a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
C. International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979 (Pub. L. 96-39), as amended by the
Uruguay Round Agreements Act (Pub. L. 103-465), prohibits Federal
agencies from establishing standards or engaging in related activities
that create unnecessary obstacles to the foreign commerce of the United
States. Pursuant to these Acts, the establishment of standards is not
considered an unnecessary obstacle to the foreign commerce of the
United States, so long as the standard has a legitimate domestic
objective, such as the protection of safety, and does not operate in a
manner that excludes imports that meet this objective. The statute also
requires consideration of international standards and, where
appropriate, that they be the basis for U.S. standards. The FAA has
assessed the potential effect of this final rule and determined that it
will impose the same costs on domestic and international entities and
thus has a neutral trade impact.
D. Unfunded Mandates Assessment
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub.L. 104-4)
requires each Federal agency to prepare a written statement assessing
the effects of any Federal mandate in a proposed or final agency rule
that may result in an expenditure of $100 million or more (in 1995
dollars) in any one year by State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector; such a mandate is deemed to be
a ``significant regulatory action.'' The FAA currently uses an
inflation-adjusted value of $155.0 million in lieu of $100 million.
This final rule does not contain such a mandate; therefore, the
requirements of Title II of the Act do not apply.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) requires
that the FAA consider the impact of paperwork and other information
collection burdens imposed on the public. The FAA has determined that
there would be no new requirement for information collection associated
with this rule.
F. International Compatibility and Cooperation
In keeping with U.S. obligations under the Convention on
International Civil Aviation, it is FAA policy to conform to
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) Standards and
Recommended Practices to the maximum extent practicable. The FAA has
determined that there are no ICAO Standards and Recommended Practices
that correspond to these proposed regulations.
G. Environmental Analysis
FAA Order 1050.1F identifies FAA actions that are categorically
excluded from preparation of an environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under the National Environmental Policy
Act in the absence of extraordinary circumstances. The FAA has
determined this rulemaking action qualifies for the categorical
exclusion identified in paragraph 5-6.6 and involves no extraordinary
circumstances.
V. Executive Order Determinations
A. Executive Order 13132, Federalism
The FAA has analyzed this final rule under the principles and
criteria of Executive Order 13132, Federalism. The agency determined
that this action will not have a substantial direct effect on the
States, or the relationship between the Federal Government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various
[[Page 55122]]
levels of government, and, therefore, does not have Federalism
implications.
B. Executive Order 13211, Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
The FAA analyzed this final rule under Executive Order 13211,
Actions Concerning Regulations that Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use (May 18, 2001). The agency has determined that it
is not a ``significant energy action'' under the executive order and it
is not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
VI. How To Obtain Additional Information
A. Rulemaking Documents
An electronic copy of a rulemaking document may be obtained by
using the Internet--
1. Search the Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://www.regulations.gov);
2. Visit the FAA's Regulations and Policies Web page at https://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/ or
3. Access the Government Printing Office's Web page at https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/.
Copies may also be obtained by sending a request (identified by
notice, amendment, or docket number of this rulemaking) to the Federal
Aviation Administration, Office of Rulemaking, ARM-1, 800 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591, or by calling (202) 267-9680.
B. Comments Submitted to the Docket
Comments received may be viewed by going to https://www.regulations.gov and following the online instructions to search the
docket number for this action. Anyone is able to search the electronic
form of all comments received into any of the FAA's dockets by the name
of the individual submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association, business, labor union, etc.).
C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA) of
1996 requires the FAA to comply with small entity requests for
information or advice about compliance with statutes and regulations
within its jurisdiction. A small entity with questions regarding this
document, may contact its local FAA official, or the person listed
under the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT heading at the beginning of
the preamble. To find out more about SBREFA on the Internet, visit
https://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/rulemaking/sbre_act/.
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 440
Indemnity payments, Insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Space transportation and exploration.
The Amendments
In consideration of the foregoing, the Federal Aviation
Administration amends chapter III of title 14, Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 440--FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
0
1. The authority citation for part 440 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 51 U.S.C. 50901-50923.
0
2. Amend Sec. 440.3 by adding the definitions of first-tier customer
and part 440 customer in alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 440.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
First-tier customer means a customer as defined in this section,
and who has a contractual relationship with a license or permit holder
to obtain launch or reentry services.
* * * * *
Part 440 customer means a customer as defined in this section,
other than a first-tier customer.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec. 440.17 by revising paragraphs (b) through (f) to read as
follows:
Sec. 440.17 Reciprocal waiver of claims requirements.
* * * * *
(b) The licensee or permittee and each of its contractors and
subcontractors, each customer, and each customer's contractors and
subcontractors, must enter into a reciprocal waiver of claims agreement
under which each party waives and releases claims against all the other
parties to the waiver and against any other customer, and agrees to
assume financial responsibility for property damage it sustains and for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by its own employees, and to
hold harmless and indemnify each other from bodily injury or property
damage sustained by its employees, resulting from a licensed or
permitted activity, regardless of fault.
(1) The licensee or permittee must extend the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to each of its contractors and subcontractors
involved in launch or reentry services, and each of its first-tier
customers.
(2) Any first-tier customer must extend the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to each of its contractors and subcontractors
involved in launch or reentry services, and each of its customers.
(3) Any part 440 customer must extend the reciprocal waiver of
claims requirements to each of its contractors and subcontractors
involved in launch or reentry services, and each of its customers.
(c) For each licensed or permitted activity in which the United
States, or its contractors and subcontractors, is involved or where
property insurance is required under Sec. 440.9(d), the Federal
Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation, the
licensee or permittee, and each first-tier customer must enter into a
reciprocal waiver of claims agreement. The reciprocal waiver of claims
must be in the form set forth in appendix B of this part for a licensed
activity, in appendix C of this part for a permitted activity, or in a
form that otherwise provides all the same obligations and benefits. The
reciprocal waiver of claims must provide that:
(1) Each party to the reciprocal waiver of claims, including the
United States but only to the extent provided in legislation:
(i) Waives and releases claims it may have against each other party
to the reciprocal waiver of claims, any customer, and against their
respective contractors and subcontractors, for property damage it
sustains and for bodily injury or property damage sustained by its own
employees, resulting from licensed or permitted activities, regardless
of fault;
(ii) Assumes responsibility for property damage it sustains and for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted activities, regardless of fault. A
licensee or permittee and each first-tier customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the United States, any other
customer, and the contractors and subcontractors of each for bodily
injury or property damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities, regardless of fault; and
(iii) Extends the requirements of the waiver and release of claims,
and the assumption of responsibility, hold harmless, and
indemnification, to its contractors and subcontractors involved in
launch and reentry services, and, for each customer, to its contractors
and subcontractors involved in launch and reentry services, and
customers, by
[[Page 55123]]
requiring them to waive and release all claims as follows:
(A) For each contractor and subcontractor of the licensee or
permittee, all claims against any customer, the United States, and each
of their respective contractors and subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify any customer, the United States, and each
of their respective contractors and subcontractors, for bodily injury
or property damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
licensed activities, regardless of fault;
(B) For each contractor and subcontractor of any customer, all
claims against the licensee or permittee, any other customer, the
United States, and each of their respective contractors and
subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible for property damage they
sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify the licensee
or permittee, any other customer, the United States, and each of their
respective contractors and subcontractors, for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
licensed activities, regardless of fault;
(C) For each contractor and subcontractor of the United States, all
claims against the licensee or permittee, any customer, and each of
their respective contractors and subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify the licensee or permittee, any other
customer, the United States, and each of their respective contractors
and subcontractors, for bodily injury or property damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from licensed activities, regardless of
fault to the extent that claims they would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e);
(D) For each part 440 customer, all claims against the licensee or
permittee, any other customer, the United States, and each of their
respective contractors and subcontractors; and to agree to be
responsible for property damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify the licensee or permittee, any other
customer, the United States, and each of their respective contractors
and subcontractors, for bodily injury or property damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from licensed activities, regardless of
fault; and
(2) For the following parties--
(i) The licensee or permittee must hold harmless and indemnify each
first-tier customer and its directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them; the United
States and its servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them; and any part 440 customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them
from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
any of licensee's or permittee's contractors and subcontractors may
have for property damage sustained by them and for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by their employees, resulting from licensed
or permitted activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's
failure to implement properly the waiver requirement. The requirement
of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section to hold harmless and indemnify
the United States and its servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, does not apply when:
(A) Claims result from willful misconduct of the United States or
its agents;
(B) Claims for property damage sustained by the United States or
its contractors and subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e);
(C) For licensed activity, claims by a third party for bodily
injury or property damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c), and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation
after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and are payable pursuant to
the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec. 440.19; or
(D) The licensee has no liability for claims exceeding
$1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above
the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c).
(ii) Each first-tier customer must hold harmless and indemnify the
licensee or permittee and its directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them; the United
States and its servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them; and any part 440 customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims
that any of each first-tier customer's customers, contractors, or
subcontractors, may have for property damage sustained by them and for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from licensed or permitted activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party's failure to implement properly the waiver
requirement.
(iii) The Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of
Transportation on behalf of the United States, but only to the extent
provided in legislation, must hold harmless and indemnify the licensee
or permittee, each first-tier customer, any part 440 customer, and
their respective directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them, from and against liability,
loss or damage arising out of claims that contractors and
subcontractors of the United States may have for property damage
sustained by them and for bodily injury or property damage sustained by
their employees, resulting from licensed or permitted activities and
arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to implement properly
the waiver requirement to the extent that claims they would otherwise
have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c)
and (e).
(d) For each licensed or permitted activity in which the United
States or its contractors and subcontractors are involved, the Federal
Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation and each
space flight participant must enter into or have in place a reciprocal
waiver of claims agreement. The reciprocal waiver of claims must be in
the form set forth in appendix E of this part, or in a form that
otherwise provides all the same obligations and benefits.
(1) The reciprocal waiver of claims must provide that each space
flight participant:
(i) Waive and release claims he or she may have against the United
States, and against each of its contractors and subcontractors, for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by the space flight
participant, resulting from licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for bodily injury or property damage,
sustained by the space flight participant, resulting from licensed or
permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(iii) Hold harmless the United States, and its contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or property damage, sustained by the
space flight participant,
[[Page 55124]]
resulting from licensed or permitted activities, regardless of fault;
and
(iv) Hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss, or damage arising out of claims
brought by anyone for property damage or bodily injury sustained by the
space flight participant, resulting from licensed or permitted
activities.
(2) The reciprocal waiver of claims must provide that the United
States:
(i) Waive and release claims it may have against the space flight
participant for property damage it sustains, and for bodily injury or
property damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from licensed
or permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for property damage it sustains, and for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims it would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively;
(iii) Assume responsibility for property damage it sustains,
resulting from permitted activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims it would otherwise have for such damage exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(e);
(iv) Extend the requirements of the waiver and release of claims,
and the assumption of responsibility to its contractors and
subcontractors by requiring them to waive and release all claims they
may have against the space flight participant, and to agree to be
responsible, for any property damage they sustain and for any bodily
injury or property damage sustained by their own employees, resulting
from licensed activities, regardless of fault; and
(v) Extend the requirements of the waiver and release of claims,
and the assumption of responsibility to its contractors and
subcontractors by requiring them to waive and release all claims they
may have against the space flight participant, and to agree to be
responsible, for any property damage they sustain, resulting from
permitted activities, regardless of fault.
(e) For each licensed or permitted activity in which the United
States or its contractors and subcontractors is involved, the Federal
Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation and each
crew member must enter into or have in place a reciprocal waiver of
claims agreement. The reciprocal waiver of claims must be in the form
set forth in appendix D of this part, or in a form that otherwise
provides all the same obligations and benefits.
(1) The reciprocal waiver of claims must provide that each crew
member:
(i) Waive and release claims he or she may have against the United
States, and against each of its contractors and subcontractors, for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by the crew member,
resulting from licensed or permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for bodily injury or property damage,
sustained by the crew member, resulting from licensed or permitted
activities, regardless of fault;
(iii) Hold harmless the United States, and its contractors and
subcontractors, for bodily injury or property damage, sustained by the
crew member, resulting from licensed or permitted activities,
regardless of fault; and
(iv) Hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or
any of them, from and against liability, loss, or damage arising out of
claims brought by anyone for property damage or bodily injury sustained
by the crew member, resulting from licensed or permitted activities.
(2) The reciprocal waiver of claims must provide that the United
States:
(i) Waive and release claims it may have against the crew member
for property damage it sustains, and for bodily injury, including
death, or property damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from licensed or permitted activities, regardless of fault;
(ii) Assume responsibility for property damage it sustains, and for
bodily injury or property damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from licensed activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims it would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed
the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively;
(iii) Assume responsibility for property damage it sustains,
resulting from permitted activities, regardless of fault, to the extent
that claims it would otherwise have for such damage exceed the amount
of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(e);
(iv) Extend the requirements of the waiver and release of claims,
and the assumption of responsibility to its contractors and
subcontractors by requiring them to waive and release all claims they
may have against the crew member and to agree to be responsible, for
any property damage they sustain and for any bodily injury or property
damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from licensed
activities, regardless of fault; and
(v) Extend the requirements of the waiver and release of claims,
and the assumption of responsibility to its contractors and
subcontractors by requiring them to waive and release all claims they
may have against the crew member and to agree to be responsible, for
any property damage they sustain, resulting from permitted activities,
regardless of fault.
(f) Any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or agreement
to hold harmless and indemnify pursuant to this section does not apply
to claims for bodily injury or property damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the parties to the reciprocal waiver of claims,
the contractors and subcontractors of any of the parties to the
reciprocal waiver of claims, and in the case of licensee or permittee
and customers and the contractors and subcontractors of each of them,
the directors, officers, agents and employees of any of the foregoing,
and in the case of the United States, its agents.
0
4. Revise appendix B to part 440 to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 440--Agreement for Waiver of Claims and Assumption
of Responsibility for Licensed Activities
Part 1--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Launch, Including Suborbital Launch
Subpart A--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for
Licensed Launch, Including Suborbital Launch, With One Customer
This agreement is entered into this__day of____, by and among
[Licensee] (the ``Licensee''), [Customer] (the ``Customer'') and the
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation,
on behalf of the United States Government (collectively, the
``Parties''), to implement the provisions of Sec. 440.17(c) of the
Commercial Space Transportation Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch.
III (the ``Regulations''). This agreement applies to the launch of
[Payload] payload on a [Launch Vehicle] vehicle at [Location of
Launch Site]. In consideration of the mutual releases and promises
contained herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above-named Customer.
License means License No.__issued on____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department
[[Page 55125]]
of Transportation, to the Licensee, including all license orders
issued in connection with the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any transferee of the Licensee
under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Licensed Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property
Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Licensee, the United States, any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and Customer shall each be responsible for Property
Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault. Licensee and Customer shall each hold harmless
and indemnify each other, the United States, any other customer, and
the Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify Customer, the United States, any Part
440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Licensee, the United States, and any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Licensee, the United States, and any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Licensee, Customer, any
Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify Customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any Part 440 Customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims that Licensee's Contractors and Subcontractors may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Licensee and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any other customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, or customers, may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an appropriations law
or to the extent there is enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the United States shall hold
harmless and indemnify Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer,
and their respective directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Contractors and Subcontractors of the United States may have for
Property Damage sustained by them, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the
Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the extent that: (i) As
provided in paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims result from
willful misconduct of the United States or its agents; (ii) claims
for Property Damage sustained by the United States or its
Contractors and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e) of the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and
are payable pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec.
440.19 of the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after
January 1, 1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations.
[[Page 55126]]
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Licensee, Customer or the United States of any claim by
an employee of the Licensee, Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors and
Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Licensee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
Subpart B--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for
Licensed Launch, Including Suborbital Launch, With More Than One
Customer
This agreement is entered into this__day of____, by and among
[Licensee] (the ``Licensee''); [List of Customers]; (with [List of
Customers] hereinafter referred to in their individual capacity as
``Customer''); and the Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of the United States
Government (collectively, the ``Parties''), to implement the
provisions of Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space Transportation
Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the ``Regulations''). This
agreement applies to the launch of [Payload] payload on a [Launch
Vehicle] vehicle at [Location of Launch Site].
In consideration of the mutual releases and promises contained
herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means each above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above-named Customer.
License means License No.__issued on____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department of Transportation, to the Licensee,
including all license orders issued in connection with the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any transferee of the Licensee
under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Licensed Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against each Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Licensee, the United States, any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors for Property Damage
it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and each Customer shall each be responsible for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault. Licensee and each Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the United States, any other
customer, and the Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
each Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify each Customer, the United States, any
Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver
and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Licensee, the United States, and any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Licensee, the United States, and any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury
or Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Licensee, each Customer,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify each Customer and
its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees
and assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any part 440 customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against
[[Page 55127]]
liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that Licensee's
Contractors and Subcontractors may have for Property Damage
sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by their employees, resulting from Licensed Activities and arising
out of the indemnifying party's failure to implement properly the
waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Licensee and
its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees
and assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any other customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
each Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, or customers, may have
for Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's
failure to implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an appropriations law
or to the extent there is enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the United States shall hold
harmless and indemnify Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and their respective directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Contractors and Subcontractors of the United States may have for
Property Damage sustained by them, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the
Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the extent that: (i) As
provided in paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims result from
willful misconduct of the United States or its agents; (ii) claims
for Property Damage sustained by the United States or its
Contractors and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e) of the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and
are payable pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec.
440.19 of the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after
January 1, 1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Licensee, any Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Licensee, any Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors
and Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents
and employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall apply to, and be deemed
to include, each such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Licensee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer 1
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
[Signature lines for each additional customer]
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
Part 2--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Licensed
Reentry
Subpart A--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for
Licensed Reentry With One Customer
This Agreement is entered into this __ day of ____, by and among
[Licensee] (the ``Licensee''), [Customer] (the ``Customer''), and
the Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of
Transportation, on behalf of the United States Government
(collectively, the ``Parties''), to implement the provisions of
Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space Transportation Licensing
Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the ``Regulations''). This agreement
applies to the reentry of the [Payload] payload on a [Reentry
Vehicle] vehicle.
In consideration of the mutual releases and promises contained
herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above named Customer.
License means License No. __ issued on ____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department of Transportation, to the Licensee,
including all license orders issued in connection with the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any transferee of the Licensee
under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Licensed Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property
Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Licensee, the United States, any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and Customer shall each be responsible for Property
Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
[[Page 55128]]
Licensee and Customer shall each hold harmless and indemnify each
other, the United States, any other customer, and the Contractors
and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e) of
the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify Customer, the United States, any Part
440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Licensee, the United States, and any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Licensee, the United States, and any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury
or Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Licensee, Customer, any
Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify Customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any Part 440 Customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims that Licensee's Contractors and Subcontractors may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Licensee and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any other customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, or customers may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an appropriations law
or to the extent there is enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the United States shall hold
harmless and indemnify Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer,
and their respective directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Contractors and Subcontractors of the United States may have for
Property Damage sustained by them, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e) of the Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of them,
from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, except to the extent that: (i) As
provided in paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims result from
willful misconduct of the United States or its agents; (ii) claims
for Property Damage sustained by the United States or its
Contractors and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e) of the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and
are payable pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec.
440.19 of the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after
January 1, 1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Licensee, Customer or the United States of any claim by
an employee of the Licensee, Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Licensee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors and
Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In Witness Whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Licensee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
Subpart B--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for
Licensed Reentry With More Than One Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day of ____, by and among
[Licensee]
[[Page 55129]]
(the ``Licensee''); [List of Customers] (with [List of Customers]
hereinafter referred to in their individual capacity as
``Customer''); and the Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of the United States
Government (collectively, the ``Parties''), to implement the
provisions of Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space Transportation
Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the ``Regulations''). This
agreement applies to the reentry of [Payload] payload on a [Reentry
Vehicle] vehicle.
In consideration of the mutual releases and promises contained
herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities described in Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means each above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above-named customer.
License means License No. __ issued on ____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department of Transportation, to the Licensee,
including all license orders issued in connection with the License.
Licensee means the Licensee and any transferee of the Licensee
under 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Licensed Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Licensee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against each Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Licensee, the United States, any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Licensee and each Customer shall each be responsible for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault. Licensee and each Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the United States, any other
customer, and the Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Licensee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
each Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify each Customer, the United States, any
Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Licensed Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver
and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Licensee, the United States, and any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Licensee, the United States, and any other customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury
or Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Licensed Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Licensee, each Customer,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Licensee shall hold harmless and indemnify each Customer and
its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees
and assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any Part 440 Customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims that Licensee's Contractors and Subcontractors may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Licensee and
its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees
and assignees, or any of them; and the United States and any other
customer as defined by Sec. 440.3 its agencies, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them; and any other
customer and its directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that each
Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, and customers, may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(c) To the extent provided in advance in an appropriations law
or to the extent there is enacted additional legislative authority
providing for the payment of claims, the United States shall hold
harmless and indemnify Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440
Customer, and their respective directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Contractors and Subcontractors of the United States may have for
Property Damage sustained by them, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Licensed
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the
amount of insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility
required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the
Regulations.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Licensee shall
[[Page 55130]]
hold harmless and indemnify the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage, resulting from Licensed Activities,
regardless of fault, except to the extent that: (i) As provided in
paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims result from willful
misconduct of the United States or its agents; (ii) claims for
Property Damage sustained by the United States or its Contractors
and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration
of financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(e) of the
Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for
inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and are payable
pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec. 440.19 of
the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for claims
exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after January 1,
1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Licensee, any Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Licensee, any Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Licensed Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customers, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Licensee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors
and Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents
and employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall apply to, and be deemed
to include, each such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Licensee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer 1
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
[Signature lines for each additional customer]
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
0
5. Revise appendix C to part 440 to read as follows:
Appendix C to Part 440--Agreement for Waiver of Claims and Assumption
of Responsibility for Permitted Activities
Part 1--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Permitted
Activities With No Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day of ____, by and
between [Permittee] (the ``Permittee'') and the Federal Aviation
Administration of the Department of Transportation, on behalf of the
United States Government (collectively, the ``Parties''), to
implement the provisions of Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space
Transportation Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the
``Regulations''). This agreement applies to [describe permitted
activity]. In consideration of the mutual releases and promises
contained herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Permit means Permit No._______issued on ____________, by the
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation, to the
Permittee, including all permit orders issued in connection with the
Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit issued under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Permitted Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against the United States, and against its Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Permittee and against its Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Property Damage it sustains resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
it would otherwise have for such damage exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee shall be responsible for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by its
own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of
fault. Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United
States, and the Contractors and Subcontractors of the United States,
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
the United States, and against the Contractors and Subcontractors of
the United States, and to agree to be responsible for Property
Damage they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless, and
indemnify the United States, and the Contractors and Subcontractors
of the United States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained
by their own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Permittee, and against the
Contractors and Subcontractors of Permittee, and to agree to be
responsible, for any Property Damage they sustain, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims
they would otherwise have for such damage exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States
and its agencies, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them, from and against liability, loss, or
damage arising out of claims that Permittee's Contractors and
Subcontractors may have for Property Damage sustained by them and
for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party's failure to implement properly the waiver
requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify Customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any Part 440
[[Page 55131]]
Customer and its directors, officers, servants, agents,
subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from and
against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Permittee's Contractors and Subcontractors may have for Property
Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their employees, resulting from Permitted Activities.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Permittee and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any other customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, and customers, may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Permittee or the United States of any claim by an
employee of the Permittee or the United States, respectively,
including a member of the Armed Forces of the United States, for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from Permitted
Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility, or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, and in the case of Permittee and its
Contractors and Subcontractors, the directors, officers, agents, and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Permittee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
Part 2--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Permitted
Activities With One Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day of ____, by and among
[Permittee] (the ``Permittee''), [Customer] (the ``Customer'') and
the Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of
Transportation, on behalf of the United States Government
(collectively, the ``Parties''), to implement the provisions of
Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space Transportation Licensing
Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the ``Regulations''). This agreement
applies to [describe permitted activity]. In consideration of the
mutual releases and promises contained herein, the Parties hereby
agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means the above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above-named customer.
Permit means Permit No. __ issued on ____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department of Transportation, to the Permittee,
including all permit orders issued in connection with the Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit issued under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Permitted Activities.
Except as otherwise defined herein, terms used in this Agreement
and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509--Commercial Space
Launch Activities, or in the Regulations, shall have the same
meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch. 509, or the
Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property
Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Permittee, the United States, any other customer, and each
of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Permittee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage
it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
its own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless
of fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e),
respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee and Customer shall each be responsible for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault. Permittee and Customer shall each hold harmless
and indemnify each other, the United States, any other customer, and
the Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of financial
responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(e) of the Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and
3(a), respectively, to its Contractors and Subcontractors by
requiring them to waive and release all claims they may have against
Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of
their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be
responsible, for Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible,
hold harmless and indemnify Customer, the United States, any Part
440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Permittee, the United States, any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Permittee, the United States, any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Permittee, Customer, any
Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
[[Page 55132]]
5. Indemnification
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify Customer and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any Part 440 Customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims that Permittee's Contractors and Subcontractors may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
(b) Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Permittee and its
directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and
assignees, or any of them; the United States and its agencies,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them; and any other customer and its directors, officers, servants,
agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of them, from
and against liability, loss or damage arising out of claims that
Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, and customers, may have for
Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's failure to
implement properly the waiver requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States and
its agencies, servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault, except to the extent
that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims
result from willful misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by the United States or
its Contractors and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e) of the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and
are payable pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec.
440.19 of the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after
January 1, 1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Permittee, Customer or the United States of any claim by
an employee of the Permittee, Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Permitted Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Permittee, Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors and
Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents and
employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Permittee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation
Part 3--Waiver of Claims and Assumption of Responsibility for Permitted
Activities With More Than One Customer
This agreement is entered into this __ day of ____, by and among
[Permittee] (the ``Permittee''); [List of Customers]; (with [List of
Customers] hereinafter referred to in their individual capacity as
``Customer''); and the Federal Aviation Administration of the
Department of Transportation, on behalf of the United States
Government (collectively, the ``Parties''), to implement the
provisions of Sec. 440.17(c) of the Commercial Space Transportation
Licensing Regulations, 14 CFR Ch. III (the ``Regulations''). This
agreement applies to [describe permitted activity].
In consideration of the mutual releases and promises contained
herein, the Parties hereby agree as follows:
1. Definitions
Contractors and Subcontractors means entities defined by Sec.
440.3 of the Regulations.
Customer means each above-named Customer.
Part 440 Customer means a customer defined by Sec. 440.3 of the
Regulations, other than the above-named Customer.
Permit means Permit No. __ issued on ____, by the Associate
Administrator for Commercial Space Transportation, Federal Aviation
Administration, Department of Transportation, to the Permittee,
including all permit orders issued in connection with the Permit.
Permittee means the holder of the Permit issued under 51 U.S.C.
Subtitle V, ch. 509.
United States means the United States and its agencies involved
in Permitted Activities. Except as otherwise defined herein, terms
used in this Agreement and defined in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V, ch.
509--Commercial Space Launch Activities, or in the Regulations,
shall have the same meaning as contained in 51 U.S.C. Subtitle V,
ch. 509, or the Regulations, respectively.
2. Waiver and Release of Claims
(a) Permittee hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against each Customer, the United States, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault.
(b) Each Customer hereby waives and releases claims it may have
against Permittee, the United States, any other customer, and each
of their Contractors and Subcontractors, for Property Damage it
sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by its
own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of
fault.
(c) The United States hereby waives and releases claims it may
have against Permittee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and
each of their respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for
Property Damage it sustains, and for Bodily Injury or Property
Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims it would
otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
3. Assumption of Responsibility
(a) Permittee and each Customer shall each be responsible for
Property Damage it sustains and for Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by its own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities,
regardless of fault. Permittee and each Customer shall each hold
harmless and indemnify each other, the United States, any other
customer, and the Contractors and Subcontractors of each, for Bodily
Injury or Property Damage sustained by its own employees, resulting
from Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(b) The United States shall be responsible for Property Damage
it sustains, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless of
fault, to the extent that claims it would otherwise have for such
damage or injury exceed the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(e) of the
Regulations.
4. Extension of Assumption of Responsibility and Waiver and Release of
Claims
(a) Permittee shall extend the requirements of the waiver and
release of claims, and the
[[Page 55133]]
assumption of responsibility, hold harmless, and indemnification, as
set forth in paragraphs 2(a) and 3(a), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against each Customer, the United
States, any Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective
Contractors and Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for
Property Damage they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless
and indemnify each Customer, the United States, any Part 440
Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by
their own employees, resulting from Permitted Activities, regardless
of fault.
(b) Each Customer shall extend the requirements of the waiver
and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility, hold
harmless, and indemnification, as set forth in paragraphs 2(b) and
3(a), respectively, to its customers, Contractors, and
Subcontractors, by requiring them to waive and release all claims
they may have against Permittee, the United States, any other
customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for Property Damage
they sustain and to be responsible, hold harmless and indemnify
Permittee, the United States, any other customer, and each of their
respective Contractors and Subcontractors, for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their own employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault.
(c) The United States shall extend the requirements of the
waiver and release of claims, and the assumption of responsibility
as set forth in paragraphs 2(c) and 3(b), respectively, to its
Contractors and Subcontractors by requiring them to waive and
release all claims they may have against Permittee, each Customer,
any Part 440 Customer, and each of their respective Contractors and
Subcontractors, and to agree to be responsible, for any Property
Damage they sustain and for any Bodily Injury or Property Damage
sustained by their own employees, resulting from Permitted
Activities, regardless of fault, to the extent that claims they
would otherwise have for such damage or injury exceed the amount of
insurance or demonstration of financial responsibility required
under Sec. 440.9(c) and (e), respectively, of the Regulations.
5. Indemnification
(a) Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify each Customer
and its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them; and any Part 440 Customer and its directors,
officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising
out of claims that Permittee's Contractors and Subcontractors may
have for Property Damage sustained by them and for Bodily Injury or
Property Damage sustained by their employees, resulting from
Permitted Activities and arising out of the indemnifying party's
failure to implement properly the waiver requirement.
(b) Each Customer shall hold harmless and indemnify Permittee
and its directors, officers, servants, agents, subsidiaries,
employees and assignees, or any of them; the United States and its
agencies, servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees,
or any of them; and any other customer and its directors, officers,
servants, agents, subsidiaries, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims that each Customer's Contractors, Subcontractors, and
customers, may have for Property Damage sustained by them and for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage sustained by their employees,
resulting from Permitted Activities and arising out of the
indemnifying party's failure to implement properly the waiver
requirement.
6. Assurances Under 51 U.S.C. 50914(e)
Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the contrary,
Permittee shall hold harmless and indemnify the United States and
its agencies, servants, agents, employees and assignees, or any of
them, from and against liability, loss or damage arising out of
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Permitted Activities, regardless of fault, except to the extent
that: (i) As provided in paragraph 7(b) of this Agreement, claims
result from willful misconduct of the United States or its agents;
(ii) claims for Property Damage sustained by the United States or
its Contractors and Subcontractors exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(e) of the Regulations; (iii) claims by a Third Party for
Bodily Injury or Property Damage exceed the amount of insurance or
demonstration of financial responsibility required under Sec.
440.9(c) of the Regulations, and do not exceed $1,500,000,000 (as
adjusted for inflation after January 1, 1989) above such amount, and
are payable pursuant to the provisions of 51 U.S.C. 50915 and Sec.
440.19 of the Regulations; or (iv) Licensee has no liability for
claims exceeding $1,500,000,000 (as adjusted for inflation after
January 1, 1989) above the amount of insurance or demonstration of
financial responsibility required under Sec. 440.9(c) of the
Regulations.
7. Miscellaneous
(a) Nothing contained herein shall be construed as a waiver or
release by Permittee, any Customer or the United States of any claim
by an employee of the Permittee, any Customer or the United States,
respectively, including a member of the Armed Forces of the United
States, for Bodily Injury or Property Damage, resulting from
Permitted Activities.
(b) Notwithstanding any provision of this Agreement to the
contrary, any waiver, release, assumption of responsibility or
agreement to hold harmless and indemnify herein shall not apply to
claims for Bodily Injury or Property Damage resulting from willful
misconduct of any of the Parties, the Contractors and Subcontractors
of any of the Parties, any Part 440 Customer, the Contractors and
Subcontractors of any Part 440 Customer, and in the case of
Permittee, each Customer, any Part 440 Customer, and the Contractors
and Subcontractors of each of them, the directors, officers, agents
and employees of any of the foregoing, and in the case of the United
States, its agents.
(c) References herein to Customer shall apply to, and be deemed
to include, each such customer severally and not jointly.
(d) This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with United States Federal law.
In witness whereof, the Parties to this Agreement have caused
the Agreement to be duly executed by their respective duly
authorized representatives as of the date written above.
Permittee
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Customer 1
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
[Signature lines for each additional customer]
Federal Aviation Administration of the Department of Transportation on
Behalf of the United States Government
By:--------------------------------------------------------------------
Its:-------------------------------------------------------------------
Issued under authority provided by 49 U.S.C. 106(f), 44701(a),
and 44703 in Washington, DC, on July 25, 2016.
Michael P. Huerta,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016-18765 Filed 8-17-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-13-P