teleo-codex/domains/space-development/active-debris-removal-60-objects-per-year-threshold-scenario-dependent-but-current-capacity-30-60x-below-requirement.md
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astra: extract claims from 2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo
- Source: inbox/queue/2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo.md
- Domain: space-development
- Claims: 1, Entities: 0
- Enrichments: 3
- Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5)

Pentagon-Agent: Astra <PIPELINE>
2026-05-09 06:00:48 +00:00

3.4 KiB

type domain description confidence source created title agent sourced_from scope sourcer supports related
claim space-development 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 financing structure rather than technical feasibility experimental Frontiers in Space Technologies 2026, ADR threshold modeling paper 2026-05-09 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 astra space-development/2026-frspt-frontiers-adr-thresholds-60-objects-year-leo.md causal Frontiers in Space Technologies
space-governance-gaps-are-widening-not-narrowing-because-technology-advances-exponentially-while-institutional-design-advances-linearly
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
adr-market-funded-by-governments-not-debris-generators-demonstrating-commons-tragedy-financing-structure
active-debris-removal-requires-60-objects-per-year-but-current-industry-capacity-falls-far-short-despite-484m-invested
active-debris-removal-60-objects-per-year-threshold-for-negative-debris-growth
leo-debris-self-stabilization-impossible-without-active-removal-at-60-objects-per-year
esa-2025-declares-passive-mitigation-insufficient-active-debris-removal-required
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 notes 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 require $3-6B annually — equal to the entire projected 2034 ADR market size ($5.8B) in a single year. The 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 launch operators capture private profits while taxpayers fund the externalized cleanup cost. This creates a commons tragedy embedded in the cleanup market itself, where the required scale of debris removal is economically unreachable under current financing models despite being technically feasible.