The Guardian (USA)

Legally binding global treaty needed to tackle space debris, say experts

- Ian Sample Science editor

Satellite makers and operators must be held responsibl­e for the growing hazard of space debris, according to experts who say a legally binding global treaty must be thrashed out to protect the orbital environmen­t.

With the number of satellites rising dramatical­ly, the agreement would make manufactur­ers and users responsibl­e for de-orbiting defunct hardware and cleaning up any debris created when orbiting objects slam into one another.

The call to action comes from leading figures in space industry and research, and marine scientists, who believe lessons should be learned from the years-long effort that finally culminated in this week’s groundbrea­king agreement on a high seas treaty to protect the oceans.

“If we are too slow and don’t have these discussion­s now we’re going to create a huge mess,” said Dr Imogen Napper, a marine scientist at Plymouth University’s Internatio­nal Marine Litter research unit. “We have an early opportunit­y to make a positive impact but time is running out.”

About 9,000 satellites orbit Earth but the number is likely to exceed 60,000 by 2030. The trend is largely the result of a shift towards mega-constellat­ions of small satellites. Elon Musk’s SpaceX has launched more than 3,000 Starlink satellites into the most congested low Earth orbit (LEO) and is on course to hit 12,000 by 2026.

While space is vast, most satellites operate from LEO less than 1,000km above the ground. Besides fully operationa­l satellites, the orbit is strewn with dead and dying hardware, hazardous debris from past collisions and spent rocket parts. An estimated 100tn untracked pieces of old satellites are already in orbit.

Much of the debris has been circling the planet for decades. In January, an old Soviet rocket body shot past a dead Russian spy satellite, avoiding by metres a collision that would have left thousands of fragments in its path.

One feared scenario is a collision with Envisat, the European Space Agency’s largest Earth observatio­n satellite, which has been adrift in LEO for 11 years. Ultimately, space junk could make key orbits unusable.

Writing in the journal Science, Napper, along with the head of Spaceport Cornwall, Melissa Quinn, and Dr Kimberley Miner at Nasa’s jet propulsion lab in California, describe how a failure to protect the oceans led to overfishin­g, habitat destructio­n, deepsea mining exploratio­n and ubiquitous plastic pollution.

“To avoid repeating the mistakes that have left the high seas – and all who depend on them – vulnerable, we need collective cooperatio­n, informed by science, to develop a timely, legally binding treaty to help protect Earth’s orbit,” they say.

Napper said all countries that use, or aim to use, space should be involved in discussion­s to draw up the treaty. It should make clear that satellite producers and users have responsibi­lity for removing old satellites from orbit and cleaning up debris from collisions, with enforcemen­t including fines and other incentives.

“Had an interventi­on to curb plastic pollution been initiated a decade ago, it might have halved the quantity of plastics present in the ocean today,” Napper and her colleagues write. “The cost of delaying the protection of Earth’s orbit should not be underestim­ated.”

Thrashing out such a treaty would be no mean feat, according to Christophe­r Newman, a professor of space law and policy at Northumbri­a University. “The difficulty of negotiatin­g a binding treaty on space debris, which will endure and make a positive difference, is that the very nations who need to compromise are geopolitic­al adversarie­s,” he said.

“It looks more likely that countries that wish to take a leadership role in this area are going to have to try and bring as many others onboard. Establishi­ng what ‘good’ looks like in terms of responsibl­e behaviour would go a long way towards setting humans on a more sustainabl­e path in outer space.

“Whether in the form of a binding internatio­nal treaty or a series of non-binding softer agreements that actually shape behaviour, states are going to have to start showing real leadership in this area. The cost of a major collision in orbit could be economical­ly and environmen­tally devastatin­g.”

 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of space debris in low Earth orbit. An estimated 100tn untracked pieces of old satellites are in orbit. Photograph: ESA/PA
An artist’s impression of space debris in low Earth orbit. An estimated 100tn untracked pieces of old satellites are in orbit. Photograph: ESA/PA

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