41 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
41 lines
3.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: source
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title: "Astroscale to conduct first operational active debris removal missions in 2026 with ELSA-M and COSMIC"
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author: "Astroscale / Space.com / Frontiers (aggregated)"
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url: https://www.space.com/astroscale-space-junk-removal-2026-plan-exclusive-video
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date: 2026-03-00
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domain: space-development
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secondary_domains: []
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format: article
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status: unprocessed
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priority: medium
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tags: [debris, active-debris-removal, astroscale, governance, commons-tragedy, regulation]
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flagged_for_leo: ["Debris removal threshold (~60 objects/year) as concrete commons governance benchmark — connects to Ostrom's principles"]
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---
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## Content
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Astroscale's 2026 ADR missions:
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- ELSA-M: launching 2026, capable of removing multiple "prepared" inactive satellites (with docking interfaces) in a single mission
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- COSMIC (Cleaning Outer Space Mission through Innovative Capture): partnership with UK Space Agency to remove 2 defunct British spacecraft in 2026
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- U.S. Patent No. 12,234,043 B2 for "Method and System for Multi-Object Space Debris Removal" — distributed architecture for scalable, repeatable ADR operations
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Regulatory developments:
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- FCC and ESA now mandate 5-year deorbit for LEO satellites (tightened from voluntary 25-year guideline)
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- Global adherence to disposal norms remains lax
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Research on ADR effectiveness (Frontiers in Space Technologies, 2026):
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- Removal of ~60 large objects (>10cm) per year is the threshold at which debris growth becomes negative and collision risk declines
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- Below this threshold, debris environment continues to deteriorate regardless of mitigation compliance
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## Agent Notes
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**Why this matters:** ADR is transitioning from demonstration to operational capability. The 60 objects/year threshold provides a concrete benchmark for whether debris governance is working. Currently, ELSA-M and COSMIC together remove maybe 3-5 objects — roughly 5-8% of what's needed. The gap between current capability and required removal rate is enormous.
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**What surprised me:** The 5-year deorbit mandate from FCC/ESA. This is a significant regulatory tightening. But "global adherence remains lax" — the governance gap applies here too.
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**What I expected but didn't find:** Cost per object removed. Economic viability of ADR at scale. Who pays for removing 60 objects/year?
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**KB connections:** [[orbital debris is a classic commons tragedy where individual launch incentives are private but collision risk is externalized to all operators]], [[Ostrom proved communities self-govern shared resources when eight design principles are met without requiring state control or privatization]]
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**Extraction hints:** The 60 objects/year threshold as a quantitative test of Kessler syndrome governance. The gap between current capability (~5 objects) and required rate (~60) as concrete evidence of the governance deficit. The FCC/ESA 5-year mandate as evidence that governance CAN tighten, but only in jurisdictions with institutional capacity.
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**Context:** Orbital debris is the most concrete governance failure in space — the only one with a quantified tipping point (Kessler syndrome). Astroscale is the leading commercial ADR provider.
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## Curator Notes (structured handoff for extractor)
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PRIMARY CONNECTION: [[orbital debris is a classic commons tragedy where individual launch incentives are private but collision risk is externalized to all operators]]
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WHY ARCHIVED: First operational ADR missions + quantified removal threshold (~60/year) provides concrete test of commons governance in space
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EXTRACTION HINT: Extract the 60 objects/year threshold as a quantitative benchmark. Compare current ADR capability (~5 objects) to required rate. This is the gap between governance aspiration and operational reality.
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