Compare commits

...

1 commit

Author SHA1 Message Date
Teleo Agents
ddc1537c23 astra: extract claims from 2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo
Some checks failed
Mirror PR to Forgejo / mirror (pull_request) Has been cancelled
- Source: inbox/queue/2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo.md
- Domain: space-development
- Claims: 2, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 4
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Astra <PIPELINE>
2026-05-08 06:27:57 +00:00
6 changed files with 63 additions and 1 deletions

View file

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
---
type: claim
domain: space-development
description: The 60-object/year threshold is specific to the 500-600km LEO band under FCC 5-year deorbit rules, and the gap between required and current capacity reflects government-funded cleanup economics rather than technical infeasibility
confidence: experimental
source: Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026, ADR threshold modeling paper
created: 2026-05-08
title: Active debris removal of approximately 60 large objects per year represents a scenario-dependent threshold for negative LEO debris growth, but current ADR capacity of 1-2 objects per year creates a 30-60x scale-up gap that is primarily a market structure problem, not an engineering problem
agent: astra
sourced_from: space-development/2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo.md
scope: causal
sourcer: Frontiers in Space Technologies
supports: ["orbital-debris-is-a-classic-commons-tragedy-where-individual-launch-incentives-are-private-but-collision-risk-is-externalized-to-all-operators", "space-governance-gaps-are-widening-not-narrowing-because-technology-advances-exponentially-while-institutional-design-advances-linearly"]
related: ["active-debris-removal-requires-60-objects-per-year-but-current-industry-capacity-falls-far-short-despite-484m-invested", "orbital-debris-is-a-classic-commons-tragedy-where-individual-launch-incentives-are-private-but-collision-risk-is-externalized-to-all-operators", "space-governance-gaps-are-widening-not-narrowing-because-technology-advances-exponentially-while-institutional-design-advances-linearly", "active-debris-removal-60-objects-per-year-threshold-for-negative-debris-growth", "esa-2025-declares-passive-mitigation-insufficient-active-debris-removal-required", "active-satellite-density-reached-parity-with-debris-density-in-500-600km-leo-band-2025", "space debris removal is becoming a required infrastructure service as every new constellation increases collision risk toward Kessler syndrome"]
---
# Active debris removal of approximately 60 large objects per year represents a scenario-dependent threshold for negative LEO debris growth, but current ADR capacity of 1-2 objects per year creates a 30-60x scale-up gap that is primarily a market structure problem, not an engineering problem
The 2026 Frontiers in Space Technologies paper identifies removal of approximately 60 large objects (>10 cm) per year as the threshold at which debris growth in the 500-600 km LEO band becomes negative under current FCC 5-year deorbit rules. The paper explicitly states this threshold is 'scenario-dependent' and 'not meant to be universal' — more complex fragmentation cascades would increase the required removal rate. Current ADR industry capacity stands at 1-2 objects per year (ClearSpace and Astroscale combined), creating a 30-60x gap between required and achieved removal rates. At $50-100M per ADR mission, achieving 60 removals per year would cost $3-6B annually — equal to the entire projected 2034 ADR market size ($5.8B) in a single year. This gap is not primarily technical: 60 distinct removal missions per year is physically achievable. The binding constraint is market structure — ADR is currently government-funded rather than operator-funded, meaning the entities generating debris (launch operators) do not bear the cleanup costs. The scale-up gap quantifies the dollar value of the commons tragedy externalization in orbital debris governance.

View file

@ -31,3 +31,10 @@ SpaceX's 1M satellite filing explicitly states a tow-truck satellite fleet would
**Source:** Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026 stabilization scenario modeling
The 60 objects/year threshold is explicitly described as scenario-dependent and illustrative rather than universal. Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026 notes that more complex fragmentation cascades would increase the required removal rate, meaning 60/year is a lower bound rather than a fixed requirement.
## Extending Evidence
**Source:** Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026
The 60-object/year threshold is explicitly scenario-dependent and specific to the 500-600km LEO band under FCC 5-year deorbit rules. The paper states the threshold is 'not meant to be universal' and that more complex fragmentation cascades would increase the required removal rate. This adds important scope limitations to the previously identified threshold.

View file

@ -0,0 +1,19 @@
---
type: claim
domain: space-development
description: ADR financing through government contracts rather than operator fees creates a misalignment where debris generators do not bear cleanup costs, preventing the self-governance mechanism Ostrom identified as essential for sustainable commons management
confidence: experimental
source: Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026 ADR paper, ClearSpace/Astroscale funding analysis
created: 2026-05-08
title: The active debris removal market's government-funding structure represents a structural commons tragedy where operators bear private launch profits while taxpayers fund externalized cleanup costs, violating Ostrom's proportional cost-benefit allocation principle
agent: astra
sourced_from: space-development/2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo.md
scope: structural
sourcer: Frontiers in Space Technologies
supports: ["adr-market-funded-by-governments-not-debris-generators-demonstrating-commons-tragedy-financing-structure"]
related: ["orbital-debris-is-a-classic-commons-tragedy-where-individual-launch-incentives-are-private-but-collision-risk-is-externalized-to-all-operators", "adr-market-funded-by-governments-not-debris-generators-demonstrating-commons-tragedy-financing-structure", "orbital debris is a classic commons tragedy where individual launch incentives are private but collision risk is externalized to all operators", "space debris removal is becoming a required infrastructure service as every new constellation increases collision risk toward Kessler syndrome", "active-debris-removal-requires-60-objects-per-year-but-current-industry-capacity-falls-far-short-despite-484m-invested"]
---
# The active debris removal market's government-funding structure represents a structural commons tragedy where operators bear private launch profits while taxpayers fund externalized cleanup costs, violating Ostrom's proportional cost-benefit allocation principle
The active debris removal market is currently funded through government contracts (ClearSpace's $103M+ ESA contract, Astroscale's government-backed funding) rather than fees paid by debris-generating operators. This creates a structural violation of Ostrom's proportional cost-benefit allocation principle: launch operators capture private profits from satellite deployments while taxpayers fund the cleanup of the resulting debris. At the required scale of 60 objects per year and $50-100M per removal mission, this represents a $3-6B annual externalization of costs. The government-funded structure prevents the emergence of self-governance mechanisms because operators face no direct financial consequence for debris generation. This is distinct from other commons tragedies because the cleanup market itself embeds the tragedy — even as ADR technology matures, the financing structure ensures operators will continue to externalize costs unless governance shifts to operator-funded cleanup fees or liability mechanisms. The ADR market thus demonstrates how a commons tragedy can persist even when the technical solution exists, if the institutional structure fails to align costs with benefits.

View file

@ -23,3 +23,10 @@ The financing structure of the emerging ADR industry reveals the classic commons
**Source:** Active debris removal market projections 2025-2034
The active debris removal market is projected to grow from $1.2B in 2025 to $5.8B by 2034, but the source explicitly notes that ADR is currently government-funded rather than operator-funded, confirming the commons tragedy structure extends to the cleanup market itself.
## Extending Evidence
**Source:** Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026, Ostrom commons governance framework
The government-funded ADR structure violates Ostrom's proportional cost-benefit allocation principle, which is essential for commons self-governance. This provides a theoretical framework explaining why the financing structure identified in the existing claim prevents sustainable debris management even as ADR technology matures.

View file

@ -17,3 +17,10 @@ related: ["orbital-debris-is-a-classic-commons-tragedy-where-individual-launch-i
# LEO debris cannot self-stabilize under any realistic deorbit compliance scenario because even 95 percent compliance only achieves stasis at 40000-50000 objects while business-as-usual doubles debris by 2050 and negative debris growth requires active removal of 60 large objects per year
Three independent modeling frameworks (Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026, OrbVeil 2026, ESA 2025) converge on the finding that LEO debris populations cannot self-stabilize through deorbit compliance alone. The stabilization scenarios show: (1) Business-as-usual with 80-90 percent compliance results in debris doubling by 2050; (2) High compliance at 95 percent or above achieves stasis at 40,000-50,000 objects but does not reduce the population; (3) Active debris removal (ADR) at 60+ large objects per year is required to achieve negative debris growth. The 60 objects/year threshold is scenario-dependent and described as illustrative rather than universal—more complex fragmentation cascades would increase the required removal rate. Current compliance rates are estimated at 80-95 percent, below the 95 percent threshold needed even for stasis. ESA's 2025 finding explicitly states that 'not adding new debris is no longer enough—active debris removal is required.' This directly falsifies the hypothesis that LEO can self-stabilize through improved operational practices alone. The finding has significant governance implications: compliance improvements buy time but do not solve the underlying accumulation problem, making ADR a structural requirement rather than an optional enhancement.
## Extending Evidence
**Source:** Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026
Even with 95%+ compliance with passive mitigation measures, debris population only achieves stasis at 40,000-50,000 objects, not reduction. The population of objects >10 cm is projected to more than double in less than 50 years even with current mitigation. This demonstrates that passive mitigation alone is structurally insufficient regardless of compliance rates.

View file

@ -7,10 +7,13 @@ date: 2026-01-01
domain: space-development
secondary_domains: []
format: thread
status: unprocessed
status: processed
processed_by: astra
processed_date: 2026-05-08
priority: high
tags: [orbital-debris, active-debris-removal, ADR, Kessler-syndrome, LEO, thresholds, modeling, governance]
intake_tier: research-task
extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5"
---
## Content