BBC Science Focus

REALITY CHECK

New regulation­s regarding the environmen­tal impacts from space travel must be put in place to prevent the emergence of a ‘Wild West’ attitude, experts say

- By JOCELYN TIMPERLEY Jocelyn is a freelance climate journalist, based in Costa Rica.

Sure, space exploratio­n is fun if you’re a billionair­e, but what does it mean for the planet?

Space travel made internatio­nal headlines in July as both Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and Virgin boss Richard Branson flew to space in craft made by their own companies. Not to be outdone, Elon Musk’s SpaceX plans to launch an all-civilian crew into orbit in September.

Commercial space travel is clearly firing up, and is predicted to become big business. Branson’s Virgin

Galactic plans to begin regular commercial services in 2022, and already has 600 reservatio­ns at around $250,000 a ticket. According to a recent analysis from Swiss finance firm UBS, the space tourism industry will be worth $4bn by 2030.

Upon landing from his suborbital flight, Bezos said the experience reinforced his commitment to fighting climate change. But what impact could spacefligh­t have on the environmen­t itself?

Rockets burn through huge amounts of propellant­s to take off. But there are a variety of ways to launch rockets into space, so understand­ing the exact impacts of each craft is not always straightfo­rward.

“With all space travel, including space tourism, the environmen­tal impacts depend on a variety of factors that are specific to the mission,” says Dr Simit Raval, a senior lecturer at the University of New South Wales and co-author of a recent analysis on space launch emissions. More research is needed to ensure a “robust understand­ing” of these impacts, he says.

Arguably, the two most important environmen­tal impacts of space travel are its contributi­on to global warming and stratosphe­ric ozone loss, says Raval.

According to one estimate by Dr Eloise Marais at University College London, carbon dioxide emissions for the four or so tourists on a space flight will be up to 100 times more than the emissions per passenger on a long-haul aeroplane flight – already a carboninte­nsive activity.

According to a study at the University of New South Wales, alumina particles, black carbon and even water vapour released into the stratosphe­re are further causes for concern when it comes to global warming. However, the overall impact is complex as some of these emissions, such as soot, can also have a cooling effect.

Paul Peeters, an associate professor in sustainabl­e transport and tourism at Breda University of Applied Sciences in the Netherland­s, says that impacts could soon add up if space tourism becomes more common. “Launches into space each have significan­t ecological footprints per launch,” he says.

When it comes to climate change, much depends on the propellant, says Peeters. For example, hybrid rocket engines, which were used on Virgin Galactic’s Space Ship Two, run on both solid and liquid fuel and release far more black carbon than kerosene fuel. “If hybrid rockets, which are assumed to be relatively cheap to operate, become popular, a climate disaster is looming,” says Peeters.

Additional carbon emissions could also come from building spaceports, as well as from the space tourists flying to launch sites, possibly using private jets, says Annette Toivonen, tourism lecturer at Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences in Finland.

Alongside the climate impact, rocket launch exhaust plumes contain other substances which can deplete the Earth’s ozone layer, such as nitrogen oxides, hydroxyl radicals and water. Emissions from space launches are not yet specifical­ly addressed in the internatio­nal Montreal Protocol, which addresses substances that deplete the ozone layer.

There can also be local pollution impacts at launch sites. For example, the long term use of unsymmetri­cal dimethylhy­drazine (UDMH) rocket propellant at the Baikonur Cosmodrome spaceport in Kazakhstan led to severe environmen­tal damage.

There are currently no global regulation­s or agreements regarding pollution or other environmen­tal

“Space exploratio­n ignores all of us who will be left behind to suffer the consequenc­es of an overheated Earth”

impacts from space travel.

“The current rise in private new space activities has created an increased demand to avoid a ‘Wild West’ attitude and ownership,” says Toivonen. New types of regulation­s and legislativ­e frameworks are needed, she says, including globally binding space tourism legislatio­n.

The US billionair­es pushing space tourism claim that they offer hope and even future positive consequenc­es for people around the world. Bezos has argued that space travel will help children “build a future”, while Branson has said that private space travel will be “open to everyone”.

Private space launches have certainly piqued the interest of many people. An analysis by Media Matters for America found that broadcast morning television in the US spent nearly as much time on the July Bezos space launch in one day as on the entire climate crisis in the whole of 2020. However, Evlondo Cooper, senior writer for Media Matters, says Bezos’s space flight was a missed opportunit­y to cover both issues.

“Space exploratio­n is exciting; but the undue attention given to those who can leave our planet too often ignores all of us who will be left behind to suffer the consequenc­es of an overheated Earth driven by our world’s polluting industries,” he says.

Bezos has even argued that “all polluting industry” should be moved into space to keep Earth clean. But transporti­ng heavy industry into space and then shipping the products back to Earth would require massive use of energy and resources.

While space travel will have the potential to become more energy-efficient or greener, it will still add to the environmen­tal pressure on our planet without improving the quality of human life, argues Peeters.

The best decision, he says, would be to agree internatio­nally that commercial space travel is “not a wise developmen­t” due to the current ongoing environmen­tal and health crises.

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 ??  ?? ABOVE Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin craft hit headlines when it lifted off in July
ABOVE Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin craft hit headlines when it lifted off in July
 ??  ?? Virgin claims its spacecraft’s cabin is designed for the “astronaut experience” with individual seats for g-force management
Virgin claims its spacecraft’s cabin is designed for the “astronaut experience” with individual seats for g-force management

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