2.1 Introduction
As the COVID-19 pandemic preoccupied most of Earth’s inhabitants in July 2020, the night sky provided a much-needed distraction. NEOWISE, the brightest comet seen in the northern hemisphere since the passage of Hale–Bopp in 1997, painted the heavens with its brilliant twin tails.
But NEOWISE was not the only new feature in the sky. ‘Trains’ of satellites crossed the sky in large numbers, with some widely shared images showing the comet being ‘photobombed’ by a dense overlay of white lines produced by SpaceX’s Starlink satellites.Footnote 1 It might be tempting to dismiss this event as a one-off – an unlucky chance alignment between NEOWISE and a single payload of about 60 recently launched satellites undergoing orbit-raising manoeuvres. But consider Figure 2.1, a wide-field image showing a ‘globular cluster’ of stars and the comet C/2020 T2 (Palomar), which was produced from two hours of image stacking.Footnote 2 The image is full of both bright and faint streaks from Starlink and other satellites. Sadly, a clear picture of the sky is quickly becoming something of the past.
Until recently, those wanting to escape the effects of terrestrial light pollution could leave cities and travel to the countryside. Indeed, ‘dark-sky spaces’ have been recognised and protected around the world, and stargazing has become a form of tourism.Footnote 3 But increasingly there is nowhere, and therefore no way, to escape the pollution from the thousands of satellites being launched each year.
Should Starlink and other so-called ‘mega-constellations’ come to fruition without brightness mitigation, the night sky as we know it could be lost. Indeed, anyone looking up at the stars as they had done in their youth could very well could see one in ten ‘stars’ moving – because they are not stars at all.Footnote 4 Adding to the confusion, such a dizzying dance of satellite movements could further create an optical illusion, so that suddenly all the lights in the sky appear to be in motion, making it difficult to track which are actual stars and which are something else.
Light pollution and a loss of natural and cultural heritage, however, are not the only problems that come with mega-constellations.
The era of mega-constellations began around 2019. Until then, the sight of a satellite was usually a cause of excitement – an ordinary person’s glimpse at the marvel of Space exploration. Indeed, as of 2019 there were ‘only’ about 3,000 satellites in low Earth orbit (LEO), about half of which were functional. Moreover, before mega-constellations, there were just individual satellites and small ‘constellations’ – groups of satellites that work together to provide some kind of service, such as the global positioning system (GPS), with its 31 satellites. Iridium has provided satellite phone services for decades with a constellation that presently contains 76 satellites. Planet Labs provides Earth imaging for farmers, forestry companies, other businesses and governments from a constellation of 200 satellites, while SiriusXM satellite radio operates from just a handful of satellites. A mega-constellation,Footnote 5 by contrast, is designed to provide low-cost, low-latency, high-bandwidth Internet around the world from thousands or even tens of thousands of satellites in LEO.
SpaceX’s Starlink constellation has been the first out of the gate. Its initial deployment phase was largely completed in 2020 with 1,440 satellites placed into a single ‘orbital shell’ – a collection of circular orbits having the same altitude, in this case 550 kilometres. SpaceX now operates more than 3,000 satellites or approximately 50 per cent of all active satellites in orbit (LEO to GEO, i.e. geosynchronous orbit),Footnote 6 and is well on its way to placing an already licensed 12,000 satellites into orbit.Footnote 7 Yet this is only its ‘Gen1’ design. The company has already filed for permission from the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to add a further 30,000 satellites, the so-called ‘Gen2’ design.Footnote 8 Other companies have similar plans for mega-constellations, including OneWeb (7,000 satellites, of which 394 have already been launched),Footnote 9 Amazon/Kuiper (3236 satellites),Footnote 10 and Guo Wang/StarNet (13,000 satellites).Footnote 11 In what could seem like a dramatic escalation, in 2021 Rwanda filed ‘advanced publication information’ with the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) for two constellations that would have more than 300,000 satellites between them – assuming the filing can be taken at face value. However, the Rwandan company in question, Marvel Space Communications,Footnote 12 might be planning to sell off all or some of any radio spectrum rights that it obtains, rather than placing that many satellites into orbit itself. It is also possible that at this time the company does not know exactly what its desired constellation will look like, but wants to lay claim to as much spectrum and orbital Space as it can while it sorts out the details. Since the Rwandan filing, other states have also filed advanced publication information for additional mega-constellations, including Canada for Kepler (114,852 satellites)Footnote 13 and the US for Astra Space (13,600 satellites).Footnote 14
Although the current governance system for LEO is slowly changing, it remains ill-equipped to handle very large systems of satellites. In this chapter, we outline how the current direction of development – essentially the application of the ‘consumer electronic product model’ to satellites – could lead to multiple tragedies of the commons. Some of these are well known, such as a loss of access to certain orbits because of Space debris, while others have received insufficient attention thus far, including changes to the chemistry of Earth’s upper atmosphere and increased dangers on Earth’s surface from re-entered debris. The heavy use of certain orbital regions might also result in the de facto exclusion of other actors from them, violating the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which among other things designates Space as ‘free for exploration and use for all States without discrimination of any kind’ and that this exploration and use of Space is ‘the province of all [hu]mankind’ (Art. I).Footnote 15 In the next chapter, we address some of the legal issues arising from collisions and Space debris, as well as from the effects of light pollution on astronomy.
We conclude that all these challenges associated with mega-constellations should be addressed in a co-ordinated manner through multilateral law-making, whether at the United Nations, at the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC), or via an ad hoc process, rather than in an unco-ordinated manner through different national systems. Multilateral law-making has already delivered solutions to similar challenges regarding civil aviation in international air space and commercial shipping on the high seas.
Most importantly, mega-constellations require a shift in perspectives and policies. Instead of looking at single satellites, we need to evaluate systems of thousands of satellites, launched by multiple states and companies, all operating within a shared ecosystem. We use the term ‘ecosystem’ to underline an obvious but necessary point: the closer regions of Space are part of Earth’s environment. Mega-constellations are on track to exceed the limits of that environment, with negative consequences for all of humanity.
2.2 Why Mega-constellations?
The thinking behind mega-constellations is simple, at least in general terms. Companies want to offer low-latency, reliable broadband Internet connectivity regardless of user location. They are betting that, with enough users in remote and rural communities and on ships, trains, planes and automobiles, the winners in the race to industrialise LEO will create and capture a profitable long-term market. Whether these companies are right remains to be seen. It is possible that the difference between success and failure will ultimately be in the hands of military rather than civilian customers, since global low-latency connectivity delivered via thousands of satellites could offer a strategic advantage, for some applications, over higher-latency systems delivered by a much smaller number of satellites in higher orbits. For instance, it is widely assumed that the connectivity provided by a mega-constellation will be more resilient to attack, due to the large number of targets that would have to be struck to disrupt, disable or destroy the entire system.Footnote 16
Another benefit cited by the proponents of mega-constellations is that connectivity will be brought to rural and remote communities, Indigenous peoples and those in the least-developed countries, places that often lack fibre-optic cables and other infrastructure that many of us now take for granted. Internet connectivity also creates opportunities for remote learning and ‘telehealth’, two services that have gained prominence during the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet some early analyses have questioned whether these promises are achievable. People who are not already well off may be prevented from accessing mega-constellations due to high subscription costs and the need for some ground-link infrastructure.Footnote 17 Iridium has built a successful business of providing satellite phones to emergency services and shipping and mining companies, but at several dollars per minute of connectivity, its customer base remains small. Larger constellations aim to find millions of customers, and it remains to be seen whether long-term profitability can be achieved – especially once multiple systems are offering the same service. Again, it may be that a single large customer, such as a military, is needed for any individual mega-constellation to succeed.
It is further possible that, as technology changes, the market for Internet connectivity from Space will flatten or contract. We see a hint of this already. The Hoh, an Indigenous people in northern Washington State, were among the first early users of the Starlink constellation. However, they see this as a temporary measure, with the long-term goal being fibre connectivity – for reliability reasons as well as a desire to be their own service provider.Footnote 18
Space debris is also an issue. With several companies already launching thousands of satellites, the cumulative amount of all the material in orbit is increasing rapidly (and most importantly, in terms of collision risk, so too is the total cross-section). Elon Musk claims that billions of satellites can be operated safely in LEO,Footnote 19 but this is not generally true, particularly as more operators become involved, or if we take into account random events such as malfunctions, accidental explosions on orbit (of which there are about five each year) and meteoroid strikes. Musk also ignores the threat of lethal, non-trackable debris, which can only partly be addressed through improved detection-and-tracking technology. Over time, the cost of collisions could exceed the technological and economic advantages of LEO, pushing global satellite communications back to GEO.
2.3 Space Debris and Orbital Congestion
Figure 2.2 shows the growth of on-orbit infrastructure over time, including tracked debris, payloads (active and defunct satellites) and abandoned rocket bodies. The term ‘tracked debris’ refers to those pieces that are large enough to be catalogued and reliably reacquired through observations, with sizes typically ten centimetres in diameter or larger. For cataloguing purposes, and as discussed here, ‘tracked debris’ excludes defunct satellites and rocket bodies. The latter are, of course, forms of debris but are discussed separately on account of their significant mass, and correspondingly their potential to be sources for the ‘tracked debris’ population, as discussed further below. Debris numbers are also incomplete, in that some objects with diameters greater than ten centimetres will not yet have been identified and tracked. Nor do they include smaller debris, which is likely much more numerous, with about one million pieces being inferred for sizes greater than one centimetre in diameter. All these pieces pose a threat to satellites, spacecraft, and astronauts due to their orbits criss-crossing at high relative speeds. The debris is generated by accidental explosions, collisions and degradation in the harsh Space environment. Debris can also result from the intentional destruction of objects in orbit, as discussed in Chapters 7 and 8. Whatever the cause, fragmentation of objects in orbit increases the cross-section of orbiting material, and with it the probability of collisions over time. Eventually, collisions could become the dominant factor changing the orbital environment, a situation called the Kessler–Cour–Palais syndrome, which could in some scenarios lead to a collisional chain reaction – essentially, runaway Space debris.Footnote 20
There is a natural clearing process for debris due to atmospheric drag, caused by the presence of some gas in the lower portions of LEO. This clearing action is highlighted by the fraction of debris that has de-orbited. However, the production of debris is outpacing this self-cleaning behaviour. More worrisome are the sudden jumps in the debris population, owing to the 2007 Chinese anti-satellite weapon test, the 2009 Iridium 33–Kosmos 2251 collision, and most recently the 2021 Russian anti-satellite weapon test. Unfortunately, these jumps might provide a glimpse of what to expect as we industrialise Earth orbits.
Also shown in Figure 2.2 are the growth and decay curves of rocket bodies, i.e. rocket stages that have been abandoned in orbit after use. While fewest in number, they have the greatest mass of all the derelict objects in orbit and are a major source of debris generation. We discuss rocket bodies at length in Chapter 4.
Finally, the payload curves represent the growth of active and defunct satellites. There was a steady rise in the number of satellites in orbit until 2015, which then transitioned to a sudden rise in 2019. This change in slope serves as an environmental definition for the start of ‘NewSpace’ – an era dominated by commercial Space actors and mega-constellations.
Simulations of the long-term evolution of debris suggest that LEO is already in the early and still slow-moving stages of the Kessler–Cour–Palais syndrome.Footnote 21 This could potentially be managed through active debris removal – a technologically feasible process, though very expensive and perhaps legally contentious.Footnote 22 But that potentiality does not reduce the seriousness of the current situation: the addition of mega-constellations and the general proliferation of ‘small’ satellites in LEO is stressing the orbital environment, and it is doing so at astonishing speed.Footnote 23
Although the volume of Space is large, each individual satellite and every satellite system has specific functions, requiring specific altitudes and inclinations (Figure 2.3).Footnote 24 This increases congestion in certain regions of LEO and requires active management for station-keeping and collision avoidance.Footnote 25 Improved Space situational awareness is required, with data from satellite operators as well as from ground- and Space-based sensors being widely and freely shared.Footnote 26 Improved communication among satellite operators is also necessary. For example, in 2019, the European Space Agency (ESA) moved an Earth-observation satellite to avoid colliding with a Starlink satellite, after failing to reach SpaceX by e-mail.Footnote 27
Then, in December 2021, China reported that its Space station had manoeuvered on two occasions, on 1 July and 21 October 2021, to avoid potential collisions with Starlink satellites.Footnote 28 One of those satellites had moved into a nearby orbit, resulting in a ‘close encounter’, while the other was moving unpredictably. China emphasised that the United States was legally responsible for SpaceX’s activities and for ensuring that they complied with the Outer Space Treaty.Footnote 29 There is insufficient information about these incidents to determine objectively what caused them. There may have been a breach in spaceflight safety, a possibility complicated by the lack of any rules concerning what constitutes a ‘safe’ distance for a ‘conjunction’ (i.e. a close approach). It is also possible, and possibly more likely, that SpaceX and the China National Space Administration (CNSA) have different decision matrices for ensuring on-orbit safety. Equally possible, as with the ESA incident in 2019, is that SpaceX and CNSA lack an effective channel of communication, one that would have enabled them to co-ordinate their actions.
Such channels of communication are needed between all spacecraft operators. Earlier in 2021, SpaceX and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) announced that they would be co-operating to reduce the risk of collisions arising from their on-orbit activities. However, this agreement is between only one operator and one agency,Footnote 30 although, according to SpaceX, efforts to share data with other operators are now under way.Footnote 31 Such efforts at co-operation clearly need to include other governments, and especially China and Russia. Just as importantly, internationally adopted ‘right-of-way’ rules are needed to prevent games of ‘chicken’,Footnote 32 as companies, seeking to preserve thruster fuel and avoid service interruptions, wait for the other operator to move its satellite first.
2.4 Increased Collision Risk
Mega-constellations are composed of relatively low-cost, mass-produced satellites with few backup systems. This ‘consumer electronic product model’ allows for short upgrade cycles and rapid expansions of capabilities, but it also results in considerable amounts of discarded equipment and therefore increased collisional risks. Although SpaceX will actively de-orbit its satellites at the end of their five- to six-year operational lives, this process will take six months, so roughly 10 per cent will be de-orbiting at any time. If other companies do likewise, thousands of de-orbiting satellites will be slowly passing through the same congested region. Because satellites in higher orbital shells will by necessity pass through all lower shells, stresses on Space traffic management will be enhanced, raising the risk of collisions. Construction flaws and other malfunctions will increase these numbers, with the long-term failure rate being difficult to project. It should further be recognised that such congestion affects all orbital operations, including in GEO, due to the need to perform orbit-raising manoeuvres (i.e. ‘GEO-transfer’ orbits) that repeatedly pass through LEO for several weeks or months. Indeed, a collision between an LEO object and a GEO transfer object would create a debris ‘family’ that passes through all near-Earth orbital Space. Again, it is important to remember that SpaceX will be just one of many companies engaging in such practices in a congested environment, creating a serious collective action problem with no easy fix.
Figure 2.4 depicts some of the congestion that we can expect to see. It is similar to the righthand plot in Figure 2.3, but includes the Starlink, OneWeb, Amazon/Kuiper and Guo Wang/StarNet mega-constellations as filed (and amended) with the FCC and/or ITU, for a total of about 65,000 satellites. The large spikes show the considerable density of satellites in orbital shells. The total cross-section within these regions is high, and a satellite fragmentation, for any reason, at one of those altitudes could lead to multiple collisions and large-scale debris generation.
De-orbiting satellites will be tracked while operational satellites can be manoeuvred to avoid close conjunctions with them, with other satellites and with trackable debris. But effective collision avoidance often depends on ongoing communication and co-operation between operators, which, as noted above, is at present ad hoc and voluntary. The situation could become more, not less, complicated, as autonomous collision avoidance systems are developed. In April 2021, SpaceX sent a letter to the FCC about how, in the face of one upcoming conjunction, OneWeb requested that SpaceX turn off its autonomous collision avoidance system so that OneWeb could safely manoeuver its satellite out of the way.Footnote 33
SpaceX also points to its automatic collision avoidance technology to justify the high density of its satellites in individual shells. But in August 2021, it emerged that the system is currently entirely dependent on the standard (and not always accurate) conjunction warnings provided by the United States Space Command (USSPACECOM).Footnote 34 Unresponsive satellites add a further collision risk. Worse yet, SpaceX’s collision assessments, at least according to their FCC filings, do not account for untracked, lethal debris (i.e. pieces with diameters of less than about ten centimetres and larger than a few millimetres),Footnote 35 including untracked debris decaying through the shells used by Starlink. Using simple estimates,Footnote 36 the probability that a single piece of untracked debris will hit any satellite in the Starlink 550-kilometre shell is about 0.003 after one year. Thus if, at any time, there are just over 200 pieces of untracked debris decaying through the 550-kilometre orbital shell, there is roughly a 50 per cent chance that there will be one or more collisions between satellites in the shell and a piece of untracked debris.Footnote 37 While not all collisions will lead to catastrophic failures, they will still degrade the orbital environmental by producing additional debris and wearing down satellites. And it only takes one collision with a significant fragmentation outcome to produce large amounts of debris, which in turn could produce widespread satellite failures within an orbital shell.
Moreover, fragmentation events are never confined to their local orbits. As Chapters 7 and 8 explain, India’s 2019 anti-satellite weapon test was conducted at an altitude below 300 kilometres in a good-faith effort to minimise long-lived debris. Nevertheless, some tracked debris (and presumably a larger amount of untracked but still lethal debris) was placed in orbits with apogees greater than 1,000 kilometres. As of January 2022, there was one piece of tracked debris from that test still in orbit. Pieces of such long-lived debris have high eccentricities and thus can cross multiple orbital shells twice per orbit. Yet all these collision risks associated with mega-constellations have not received due consideration, in part because of the FCC’s practice of considering only the per-satellite collision risk when issuing licences for mega-constellations composed of thousands of satellites.Footnote 38
The collision risks associated with meteoroids have also been largely ignored, presumably because the cross-section of on-orbit infrastructure has, until recently, been relatively low. Moreover, unlike collisions with debris, collisions with meteoroids are unavoidable, which reduces the options available to any government or company wishing to reduce the risks.
Meteoroids are composed of natural material that is between about 30 microns and one metre in diameter.Footnote 39 Their main source is ejected pieces of asteroids and comets. Much smaller objects are called ‘dust’, and larger objects are thought to be more asteroid-like, although this is a definition of convenience more than anything else. In any event, the cumulative meteoroid flux for masses of greater than 0.01 gram is about 1.2 × 10–4 meteoroids per square metre per year.Footnote 40 Such masses could cause significant damage to satellites, even if they do not result in catastrophic fragmentation,Footnote 41 in part because meteoroids can attain much higher impact speeds than orbital debris. Assuming a Starlink constellation of only 12,000 satellites (i.e. the Gen1 design), there is about a 50 per cent chance of 15 or more meteoroid impacts (or a 99.7 per cent chance of one or more meteoroid impacts) per year at a mass of more than 0.01 gram.Footnote 42 Adding more satellites will only increase the number of events per year.
Many satellites are designed with shielding, but damaging events that might be rare to a single satellite will become common when measured across all orbital infrastructure. Therefore, while orbital debris will likely remain the most significant threat to mega-constellations, we can also anticipate regular satellite failures due to meteoroid impacts. Again, this is a result of the total cross-section on orbit, and not strictly the total number of satellites. So even small satellites in sufficiently large numbers – such as the 114,852 satellites for which Kepler has filed advanced publication information – could give rise to regular debris-generating events from collisions with either debris or meteoroids.
One response to all these concerns about congestion and collisions is for operators to construct mega-constellations out of fewer satellites. But with more and more operators entering LEO, even this would only provide a partial solution. For this reason, it is critically important that spacefaring states and satellite companies, individually and collectively, take an all-of-LEO approach to evaluating the effects of the construction and maintenance of any one constellation, and then to mitigating the cumulative effects of all constellations.
2.5 Surface Impacts
Re-entering rocket stages pose growing safety and environmental risks on the Earth’s surface, as we explain at length in Chapter 4. SpaceX is a relatively responsible actor in this regard, as the first stages of SpaceX rockets are usually landed and reused, while second stages are usually controlled through re-entry and deposited in remote areas of ocean. Unfortunately, these best practices are not being followed – or cannot yet be followed – by other launch providers. For example, the first stages of the Soyuz rockets employed by OneWeb until February 2022 (when Russia invaded Ukraine) are not reusable, nor are the second-stage re-entries controllable. OneWeb has since signed a contract to use India’s Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle,Footnote 43 which is similarly limited. The Vulcan Centaur rockets that will be used by Amazon/Kuiper suffer from the same limitations, as do the Long March rockets that will likely be employed by Guo Wang/StarNet.
Satellite re-entries pose their own risks – including that of killing people – since re-entering orbiting material often does not demise (‘burn up’) completely in the atmosphere.Footnote 44 To get a feel for the numbers, consider the early FCC filings made by SpaceX for its Starlink satellites. The typical ‘casualty risk’ per satellite was listed as about 1:20,000 (the highest risk was 1:17,400),Footnote 45 meeting NASA’s risk threshold of 1:10,000 per object. The satellites were (and still are) expected to last between five and six years, with a full replacement of the constellation occurring on that timescale. This meant that every replacement cycle of the 12,000 satellites in Starlink Gen1 carried a 45 per cent probability of one or more casualties from the re-entering satellites (). If this were extended to Starlink’s full 42,000 satellites (Gen1 and Gen2 taken together), the probability of one or more casualties per replacement cycle would be 88 per cent. Again, we are talking here about the statistical likelihood of people getting killed by a satellite impact. Fortunately, the issue was identified during the FCC’s ‘open consultation’ process.Footnote 46 SpaceX responded by changing some components to make its satellites fully demisable and therefore of no threat to people on the Earth’s surface. However, the effects of these changes will have to be verified, and it remains to be seen whether other operators will follow this new best practice.
Even controlled re-entries can be problematic if the re-entering rocket stage or satellite contains hazardous materials.Footnote 47 In 1978, a Soviet surveillance satellite malfunctioned, re-entered the atmosphere in an uncontrolled manner, and spread radioactive material over 120,000 square kilometres of northern Canada.Footnote 48 In 2008, the United States Navy used a ship-based missile to destroy a malfunctioning military satellite just before it entered the atmosphere.Footnote 49 The mission, named Operation Burnt Frost, was justified on the ground that it prevented 450 kg of unspent highly toxic hydrazine thruster fuel from reaching the surface.
Cumulative impacts must also be considered, especially in the ocean environments where most controlled re-entries end up.Footnote 50 In the 1990s, Pacific island states opposed the Sea Launch project because of environmental concerns, including from discarded rocket stages.Footnote 51 In 2016, Inuit in the Canadian Arctic protested the Russian practice of disposing hydrazine-fuelled rocket stages in Pikialasorsuaq (North Water Polynya), a biologically rich area of year-round open water.Footnote 52
2.6 Atmospheric Effects
2.6.1 Re-entering Satellites
The demise of satellite components during re-entry introduces a further problem since none of their material actually disappears. It is, instead, converted into very large numbers of fine particulates, atoms and molecules having the same cumulative mass. To get a sense of this, again consider Starlink satellites, which have an estimated dry mass of about 260 kg. Although we do not know their composition, we assume that most of the mass is an aluminium alloy. If 80 per cent of the mass is aluminium, and Gen1 includes 12,000 satellites, there will be 2,500 tonnes of aluminium in total. A five-year cycle would thus see on average about 1.4 tonnes re-entering Earth’s atmosphere daily. While small compared to the 54 daily tonnes of meteoroid material,Footnote 53 most meteoroids contain less than 1 per cent aluminium by mass.Footnote 54 Thus, depending on the atmospheric residence time of material from re-entered satellites, each mega-constellation could produce fine particulates that greatly exceed natural forms of high-altitude atmospheric aluminium deposition, especially if the full numbers of envisaged satellites are launched. Gen1 and Gen2 of Starlink combined, with 42,000 satellites, would lead to about five tonnes of aluminium entering the atmosphere each day, an order of magnitude above natural levels.
Anthropogenic (i.e. human-caused) deposition of aluminium in the atmosphere has long been proposed in the context of geoengineering as a way to increase Earth’s albedo – essentially, reflecting solar energy back into Space to slow global warming.Footnote 55 Recent work, however, suggests that alumina, the most typical product of aluminium reacting with the molecules naturally present in the atmosphere, might have a net warming effect through the absorption of longer-wavelength radiation.Footnote 56 Said differently, it reflects visible light but absorbs infrared. In any event, these geoengineering proposals have been scientifically controversial because of the identified and as yet unidentified risks, with controlled experiments encountering substantial opposition.Footnote 57 Mega-constellations will now begin this process as an uncontrolled experiment.Footnote 58 One could imagine Elon Musk, whose concerns about both climate change and government interference are well known, being comfortable with the geoengineering aspect of Starlink, as well as with the unadvertised and unilateral manner in which it is being done. But again, the overall effects of alumina on the climate are not settled. There is also the not insignificant issue of Musk lacking any legitimacy or authority to make decisions for the rest of humanity.
Our calculations above are rough but bolstered by the more detailed work of Leonard Schulz and Karl-Heinz Glassmeier. They calculate the current annual influx into the atmosphere as already involving 0.89 kilotonne per year (kt/yr) of anthropogenic material, of which 0.09 kt/yr is injected in atomic form and 0.26 kt/yr as aerosols.Footnote 59 The rest of the material (0.54 kt/yr) reaches the surface, at least for the situations they explore. Of the injected elements, they find aluminium to be the most abundant (0.21 kt/yr or about 0.6 tonne per day).
Schulz and Glassmeier then calculate the influx in a ‘Scenario 1’ involving 19,400 satellites. Here, the annual anthropogenic influx increases to 2.7 kt/yr, with 1.6 kt/yr being injected into the atmosphere: 1.2 kt/yr as aerosols, 0.4 kt/yr in atomic form. Again, aluminium is the largest part of the injection (0.8 kt). They further calculate the influx in a ‘Scenario 2’ involving 75,000 satellites. Here, the annual anthropogenic mass influx increases to 8.1 kt/yr, with 4.9 kt/yr being injected into the atmosphere: 3.7 kt/yr as aerosols, 1.2 kt/yr in atomic form. Once again, aluminium is the largest part of the injection at 2.5 kt/yr or about seven tonnes per day. Making satellites fully demisable for safety reasons will tend to increase these values, creating an apparent trade-off between protecting people from being struck by Space objects, on the one hand, and climate impacts – which have their own safety implications – on the other.
Schulz and Glassmeier also warn that:
There are many different possible effects on the atmosphere that are caused by an increased injection. Aerosols, respectively dust particles affect the stratosphere and mesosphere by acting as condensation nuclei contributing to the formation of high-altitude clouds. Additionally, they impact the chemistry in the upper atmosphere with possible effects on the D layer ion chemistry and the ozone layer. The large amount of aerosols injected by the ablation of anthropogenic material may also have an effect on Earth’s climate as aerosols in the high-altitude atmosphere have a negative radiative forcing effect. Injected atoms partially ionize during ablation and thus contribute to the ionospheric layers. Furthermore, injected metal atoms form metal layers where the injected particles can have various different chemical reactions with other injected material, as well as atmosphere atoms and molecules.Footnote 60
One thing is clear: the deposition of large amounts of aluminium into the upper atmosphere from re-entering mega-constellation satellites will affect the upper atmosphere, even if we do not yet know the scale of those impacts or understand all the complex interactions involved.
2.6.2 Rocket Launches
The act of putting satellites into Space can itself affect the atmosphere. While cumulative carbon dioxide emissions from rocket launches are currently small compared to other sources, CO2 alone is a misleading metric. Black carbon produced by kerosene-fuelled rockets such as SpaceX’s Falcon 9 and alumina particles produced by solid-fuelled rockets lead to instantaneous radiative forcing. As we discuss in Chapter 1 above with regard to Virgin Galactic’s SpaceShipTwo, modelling of the cumulative effect of emissions from 1,000 annual launches of hydrocarbon-fuelled rockets found that, after one decade, the black carbon would result in radiative forcing comparable to that from all subsonic aviation.Footnote 61 Although 1,000 launches annually is ten times the current rate, the construction and renewal of multiple mega-constellations will require dramatic increases in launches. Current launches likely cause significant radiative forcing already.Footnote 62
Rockets fuelled with liquid hydrogen do not produce black carbon but require larger tanks and therefore larger rockets, with solid-fuelled boosters often being used to increase payload capacity. SpaceX’s new Starship, which could soon be launching 400 Starlink satellites at a time,Footnote 63 will be fuelled by methane, the combustion of which still produces black carbon that will contribute to radiative forcing, although it is expected to do so to a lesser extent than kerosene rockets. All liquid fuels will affect mesospheric cloud formation,Footnote 64 with potential impacts on the upper atmosphere.
Rockets threaten the ozone layer directly by depositing radicals into the stratosphere,Footnote 65 with solid-fuelled rockets causing the most damage per launch because of the hydrogen chloride and alumina they contain.Footnote 66 Amazon’s recent purchase of Vulcan Centaur rockets to launch its Kuiper satellites poses a particular concern,Footnote 67 since each rocket will include multiple boosters,Footnote 68 each composed of 48,000 kg of solid fuel composed of hydroxyl-terminated polybutadiene mixed with aluminium.Footnote 69 As before, a single rocket has a negligible impact, but rocket launches in sufficient numbers could well be problematic. The radicals from rocket launches can also indirectly affect the ozone layer by altering the radiation balance and thus the temperature of the upper atmosphere, which in turn alters the reaction rates of ozone chemistry. A hotter stratosphere will tend to result in more ozone depletion.
Re-entering rockets, even reusable ones, require some consideration too. The intense heat of atmospheric re-entry will create radicals of NOx (the generic scientific term for nitrogen oxide and nitrogen dioxide), a process that does not require any ablation from the rocket.Footnote 70 Radicals have an unpaired electron and are therefore very chemically reactive, and when formed or mixed into the stratosphere they will deplete ozone. So far, meteoroids account for most of the NOx production from atmospheric entries, but near-future uses of Space could see this natural process, too, surpassed by anthropogenic production.
In short, when it comes to launching satellites and other spacecraft, there is no such thing as a ‘green’ rocket. At best, there is an environmental budget, so to speak, of launches that the Earth–Space system can handle before human activity will have a large disruptive effect. At worst, that threshold has already been reached.
2.7 Occupying Orbital Shells
From 1848 to 1855, the California Gold Rush brought 300,000 people to the newest part of the United States. The miners found themselves in a situation of relative lawlessness since Mexico’s laws no longer applied to the territory and no new laws had yet been adopted to regulate access to gold. The result was an informal system of ‘staking claims’ whereby the first to begin mining a location could exclude others through his presence, though he would risk seeing his claim ‘jumped’ if he left, even briefly.Footnote 71 Later, when laws on gold mining were finally adopted, they perpetuated this system of ‘free mining’. Not until 1866 and 1870 were shaft miners and placer miners respectively able to register and thus protect their claims.Footnote 72
Today, the occupation and use of orbital shells appear to bear certain similarities. National regulators such as the FCC are assigning orbital shells to mega-constellations on a first-come–first-served basis, without assessing the effects on other states. These effects could include making any addition of further satellites to those shells too dangerous to contemplate. This de facto occupation of orbital shells may violate Article I of the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, which designates the exploration and use of Space as ‘the province of all [hu]mankind’ and ‘free for exploration and use for all States without discrimination of any kind’. Article II further states, ‘Outer space … is not subject to national appropriation by claim of sovereignty, by means of use or occupation, or by any other means.’ Although regulators are not claiming sovereignty over orbital shells, allowing national companies to saturate them with satellites could easily be considered appropriation by ‘other means’. Lastly, Article IX requires that Space activities be conducted ‘with due regard to the corresponding interests of all other States Parties to the Treaty’.Footnote 73
Mega-constellation operators and their regulators could respond that they are exercising the right to explore and use Space without discrimination, that the use of an orbital shell is time-limited as a result of the licence, and that the satellites will be actively de-orbited.Footnote 74 They could also argue that some states have been using slots in geostationary orbit for decades, resulting in the de facto exclusion of others from any given slot without this being considered appropriation. However, the use of slots in geostationary orbit is mediated by the ITU, which does not play the same role in LEO.
Single states and operators should not be allowed to de facto occupy orbital shells by saturating them with satellites. Of course, what constitutes saturation will depend on technologies as well as different tolerances of risk. But the challenge of defining acceptable levels of use, while preserving access for others, is a reason for international governance and not a convincing argument against it. No single state is likely to handle this matter appropriately unless it co-ordinates with other spacefaring states, in the absence of which tragedies of the commons could easily arise. Institutionally, the easiest option may be to extend the ITU’s role to LEO. Other options might include assigning the regulation of different orbital shells to different states, much like air traffic control in busy regions of international airspace, where reciprocity is the primary incentive for reasonable behaviour.Footnote 75 Even then, something like the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO), which co-ordinates international air traffic control, might be needed. The development of internationally accepted ‘right-of-way’ rules could also help, similar to the priority rules that have long guided ships and boats on the world’s oceans,Footnote 76 though such rules only help to prevent imminent collisions and do not address the larger issue of congestion.
2.8 Radio Spectrum
Another ‘rush’ is occurring over radio spectrum. The ITU is involved in the allocation of frequencies to communications satellites. Under its binding instruments, namely the ITU ‘Constitution and Convention’,Footnote 77 as well as the subsidiary ‘Radio Regulations’,Footnote 78 states must treat frequencies as limited resources to which others have equitable access. At the same time, however, the ITU clearly sees the Radio Regulations as facilitative rather than constraining, writing that they ‘enable the introduction of new applications of radiocommunication technology while ensuring the efficient use of radio-frequency spectrum, i.e. the operation of as many systems as possible, without interference.’Footnote 79
Satellite companies are not party to these instruments and do not deal directly with the ITU. They apply for and obtain licences from their national regulator, which early in the planning process files a general description of the satellites with the ITU, including the frequencies and orbits they will use.Footnote 80 Under the Radio Regulations, a company is required to co-ordinate with any satellite system that might be affected by its own planned system; indeed, such filings are identified as ‘co-ordination requests’. Under the Rules of Procedure,Footnote 81 the two companies are then required to work with the ITU Radiocommunication Bureau to find a way for both systems to coexist. The highly technical character of these requirements and procedures reflects the advanced nature of the ITU as an international organisation, albeit one with a limited mandate – i.e. radio spectrum – that constrains its ability to address the fast-growing problems of physical congestion and debris.
In 2019, the ITU responded to the development of mega-constellations by adopting a ‘milestone-based regulatory approach’, whereby listing a ‘non-geosynchronous (non-GSO) satellite system’ in its Master International Frequency Register requires the deployment of certain percentages of the system by certain times.Footnote 82 Simply put, operators must deploy 10 per cent of the proposed satellites within two years ‘of the end of the current regulatory period for bringing into use’, 50 per cent within five years, and 100 percent within seven years. The idea is to ensure that the Register ‘reasonably reflects the actual deployment of such non-GSO satellite systems in specific radio-frequency bands and services’, to prevent ‘radio-frequency spectrum warehousing’, and to facilitate the ‘coordination, notification and registration of frequency assignments’.Footnote 83 The hope is that operators will now delay having their national regulator file for radio spectrum until the designs, funding, manufacturing capability and a launch provider for their satellites are all in place.
This new approach has its problems, the first of which is that the two-, five-, and seven-year milestones come after ‘the end of the current regulatory period for bringing into use’ – a period that is itself seven years long and begins after the first satellite in the system has been launched. This means that a company can launch a single satellite as a ‘placeholder’ and immediately obtain spectrum sufficient for the entire system, even if it then does nothing for seven years. That spectrum is then unavailable to others. In fact, a company can place any satellite as a placeholder – i.e. not necessarily one that will become part of the system. Third parties are already offering the placement of a temporary satellite as a contractable service.Footnote 84
A second problem concerns the penalty for failing to meet the milestones, which is simply a reduction in the number of satellites approved by the ITU. As a result, companies might be incentivised to apply for spectrum for a much larger number of satellites than they intend ultimately to launch.
A third problem is that a company that obtains spectrum may sell all or part of it to another company during the seven-year ‘bringing-into-force’ period or at any point during the subsequent seven years of milestones. In other words, a company might seek and obtain spectrum for the sole purpose of selling it to the highest bidder. Or it might seek and obtain more spectrum than it needs, with a view to selling the excess.
These problems could all converge in Rwanda’s 2021 filings for 327,320 satellites on behalf of Marvel Space Communications – more than 50 times the total number of satellites currently in operation. The satellites are to be placed in elliptical orbits with perigees around 280 kilometres and apogees around 600 kilometres. They will weigh about ten kilograms each, have antennas extending 3.5 metres, be connected optically to each other, and cost less than €10,000 each to manufacture. Achieving these design and cost parameters would be quite an accomplishment, especially for a country that does not yet have its own Space industry or launch capacity. All this suggests that Marvel Space Communications does not intend to meet the ITU milestones, and that something else is going on.
According to The Telegraph, the filing ‘has triggered concern and speculation in the space industry. If the plans are approved by the UN [i.e. the ITUFootnote 85], even if Rwanda never launches a satellite, it could sell its rights on. One source said the project was “strategically very serious … 300,000 satellites with minimal regulation up for sale to the highest bidder”.’Footnote 86 Another report suggests that the plan is targeted at the European Commission, which may have as much as €6 billion available for a Europe-based mega-constellation.Footnote 87 Such a system could, presumably, help European Union (EU) states avoid becoming overly dependent on the mega-constellations currently under development in the UK, the USA and China. The fact that Rwanda made the initial filings with the ITU would pose no impediment to this becoming a European project.
Adding to the mystery, multiple reports suggest that the Rwandan filings were instigated by Greg Wyler,Footnote 88 who founded OneWeb and served as its CEO until 2020 , when the United Kingdom rescued the company from bankruptcy – reputedly under the impression that a broadband mega-constellation in LEO could serve as a global positioning system and thus replace the EU’s medium Earth orbit-based Galileo system for post-Brexit Britain.Footnote 89 In 2020, Wyler’s connections with the Rwandan government were the subject of investigative journalism by European Investigative Collaborations, a group of media organisations that includes Der Spiegel, El Mundo, Le Soir, Politiken and the Croatian newsmagazine Nacional, where an eyebrow-raising report on Wyler’s activities was published.Footnote 90
On a more positive note, satellites having such a relatively low mass, large surface area and low perigee would easily comply with the Inter-Agency Space Debris Coordination Committee (IADC) 25-year de-orbiting guideline without needing active de-orbiting technology.Footnote 91 But such an approach would mean that this de-orbiting process is largely uncontrolled. The satellites would still pose a collision risk, in part because of their very large number and therefore high cumulative cross-section. Moreover, if we take the ITU filings at face value, the orbits are elliptical rather than concentrated into orbital shells, and so each of these 327,320 satellites would cross the orbits of the International Space Station, China’s new Tiangong Space station, all of SpaceX’s Starlink satellites and many other satellites as well. And they would each do so twice every 90 minutes or so!
It might be tempting to think of this Rwandan filing as being a special case. In some respects, it is, most obviously in the conspicuously large number of satellites involved. However, as noted above, the Kepler filings are also for more than 100,000 satellites, of which Kepler envisages only a small fraction will be its own satellites. The plan is for the rest of the constellations to be made up of third-party satellites with Kepler transmitters attached.Footnote 92 Regardless, this distinction of ownership should not distract us from the main issue, which is that these companies might actually use all or a large fraction of their filed orbits, adding literally hundreds of thousands of new satellites to LEO. And even these ambitious filings hide the full scale of what is occurring, since cumulative use must also be considered.
Between 1 January 2021 and 31 January 2022, over 1.5 million satellite slots were filed in the ITU’s ‘as-received’ database.Footnote 93 Interpreting these numbers must be done cautiously, as many slots will be left unused and there are some duplications in the database. But even if only a small fraction of these systems succeed in moving from paper to orbit, it could fundamentally change orbital congestion. To put this in perspective, only about 0.4 per cent of the proposed satellite slots (for this one year alone) would need to be used to exceed the current number of active satellites. Moreover, some of the most highly sought-after orbital altitudes are between 500 and 600 kilometres, with potential congestion extending to 1,200 kilometres. Thus, interwoven with the larger and manoeuvrable mega-constellation satellites, including Starlink and OneWeb, will be a potentially much larger number of small, cheap, unmanoeuvrable satellites.
In summary, the ITU system for allocating spectrum to ‘non-geosynchronous satellite systems’ creates multiple incentives for companies to seek as much spectrum as possible as quickly as possible. The system feeds a gold-rush mentality, and, with it, the overpopulation of LEO with low-cost, mass-produced satellites, adding to the already high collision risks and thus the Space debris crisis. Moreover, some of these systems may well be abandoned after construction if one or more companies goes bankrupt in what is likely to be a highly competitive market. And yet the ITU seems to be encouraging rather than seeking to slow these developments, or otherwise to steer them in a sustainable direction. Unless something changes, we may well see upwards of 100,000 satellites in LEO by 2030. This would constitute a massive change in the orbital environment, the consequences of which are not yet fully understood.
Fortunately, states will soon have an opportunity to expand the scope of the ITU’s mandate so that it can address these new and growing challenges. The next World Radiocommunication Conference will begin in the United Arab Emirates in November 2023. Under Article 55 of the ITU Constitution, any member state may propose any amendment to that instrument.Footnote 94 If more than half of the delegations to the conference concur, the proposal will then be debated and put to a vote – with two-thirds support being required to make the change. The revised constitution is then opened for ratifications.