Space junk could destroy satellites, hurt economies
sydney — The growing amount of fast-moving space debris orbiting the Earth could lead to catastrophic collisions with satellites, hurting economies, researchers warned on Wednesday ahead of a summit to coordinate efforts to remove the junk.
There are an estimated 170 million pieces of so-called “space junk” — left behind after missions that can be as big as spent rocket stages or as small as paint flakes — in orbit alongside some $700
170M pieces of ‘space junk’ left behind after missions can be as big as a rocket
billion of space infrastructure. But only 22,000 are tracked, and with the fragments able to travel at speeds above 27,000kmph, even tiny pieces could seriously damage or destroy satellites.
“The space junk problem has been getting worse every year,” Ben Greene, head of Australia’s Space Environment Research Centre which is hosting the two-day conference of international space environment scientists in Canberra, told AFP. “We’re losing three or four satellites a year now to space debris collision. We’re very close, Nasa estimates, of within five to
22K pieces of ‘space debris’ tracked so far are able to travel at 27,000kmph
10 years of losing everything.” Greene added in a statement that “a catastrophic avalanche of collisions which could quickly destroy all orbiting satellites is now possible”, noting that more collisions were creating extra debris.
With society heavily dependent on satellites for communication and navigation, and powering key industries such as transport, finance and energy, the growing cosmic junkyard could threaten economies.
“The Australian economy is entirely dependent on space,” Greene said.