Out into the Dark: Removing Space Debris from the Geostationary Orbit - Revised

Proceedings of the IISL Colloquium on the Law of Outer Space, Washington, D.C., USA, 2019

11 Pages Posted: 19 Nov 2019 Last revised: 3 Jun 2020

Date Written: October 25, 2019

Abstract

During the first decades of placing space objects in the Geostationary Orbit, satellite owners and operators abandoned space objects at their end-of-life, or just freed the slot by removing their satellites with the last kilograms of fuel. Also rocket stages that propelled geostationary satellites were abandoned therein. Due to the gravitational pull of the Earth at about 36,000 km, objects that do not have station-keeping systems naturally decay and re-enter the Earth’s atmosphere in at least one million years. The accumulation of space debris objects that permanently cross the Geostationary Orbit is a growing hazard to operational satellites. There is the risk that collisions of space objects lead to follow-on fragmentations, so that the resulting space debris will collide with other space objects in a cascading effect (Kessler Syndrome). Researchers at the IADC who published a set of Space Debris Mitigation Guidelines in 2002, identified the Geostationary Orbit as a ‘protected region’. One Mitigation Guideline recommends to re-orbit space objects that are reaching their end-of-life outside of this protected area. A growing number of States and international organizations reflect the IADC Mitigation Guidelines in national legislation, recommendations and standards. However, there is still an increase of large space debris objects in this area. Since it is not realistic to wait (up to one million years) for the natural deorbiting of these space objects, remediation measures need to be initiated, such as debris removal with external systems. This article describes the State practice of re-orbiting and proposes a strategy for debris removal to maintain a sustainable access and use of the Geostationary Orbit.

Keywords: Space law, IADC, remediation, active space debris removal, Geostationary Orbit, GEO region, space debris mitigation guidelines, re-orbit guideline, Outer Space Treaty, Liability Convention, IISL

Suggested Citation

Mejía-Kaiser, Martha, Out into the Dark: Removing Space Debris from the Geostationary Orbit - Revised (October 25, 2019). Proceedings of the IISL Colloquium on the Law of Outer Space, Washington, D.C., USA, 2019, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3482010

Martha Mejía-Kaiser (Contact Author)

International Institute of Space Law ( email )

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