As satellites and space junk proliferate, U.S. to revise rules
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[August 06, 2022]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -With Earth's orbit
growing more crowded with satellites, a U.S. government agency on Friday
said it would begin revising decades-old rules on getting rid of space
junk and on other issues such as satellite refueling and inspecting and
repairing in-orbit spacecraft.
"We believe the new space age needs new rules," Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel said after the 4-0 FCC
vote, adding that current rules "were largely built for another era."
She said the FCC needs "to make sure our rules are prepared for the
proliferation of satellites in orbit and new activities in our higher
altitudes."
The FCC also plans to look at "new ways to clean up orbital debris.
After all, there are thousands of metric tons of junk in space,"
Rosenworcel added. The FCC will look at "the potential for orbital
debris remediation and removal functions that offer
the prospect of improvement in the orbital debris environment."
The FCC is asking questions about in-space servicing, assembly, and
manufacturing (ISAM), which includes things like "repairing and
refueling satellites and even assembling whole new systems in orbit,"
Rosenworcel said.
The proceeding will look at efforts to transform materials through
manufacturing while in space and ISAM spectrum needs.
"The FCC remains the only agency to license virtually every commercial
space mission that touches the United States," FCC Commissioner Geoffrey
Starks said. "With that power comes the responsibility to understand the
missions we authorize, and to create an enabling regulatory environment
that opens new doors while still protecting against new risks."
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A United Launch Alliance Atlas 5 rocket lifts off from the Cape
Canaveral Air Force Station in Cape Canaveral, Florida, U.S., August
8, 2019. REUTERS/Joe Skipper/File Photo
Starks said proceeding "will help us build the record we need to
fully understand emerging ISAM technologies, their spectrum
requirements (and) their debris implications."
The FCC said ISAM has "the potential to build entire industries,
create new jobs, mitigate climate change, and advance America’s
economic, scientific, technological, and national security
interests."
The FCC is already moving to update its satellite rules and
previously adopted new rules to help satellite launch companies get
access to spectrum for transmissions "from space launch vehicles
during pre-launch testing and space
launch operations."
The FCC in November granted an experimental license to NanoRacks LLC
for communications with an experimental component attached to the
second stage of a SpaceX Falcon 9 launch
vehicle "to demonstrate metal-cutting in space."
The FCC said the proceeding will what role if any it should play in
reviewing "planetary protection plans and implications" for
missions.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio)
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