{"id":9426,"date":"2023-11-09T12:14:44","date_gmt":"2023-11-09T12:14:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/power2innovate.com\/boom-in-space-tourism-threatens-to-boost-the-amounts-of-space-junk-and-climate-emissions\/"},"modified":"2023-11-09T12:14:44","modified_gmt":"2023-11-09T12:14:44","slug":"boom-in-space-tourism-threatens-to-boost-the-amounts-of-space-junk-and-climate-emissions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/power2innovate.com\/boom-in-space-tourism-threatens-to-boost-the-amounts-of-space-junk-and-climate-emissions\/","title":{"rendered":"Boom in space tourism threatens to boost the amounts of space junk and climate emissions"},"content":{"rendered":"

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Commercial companies are increasingly becoming involved in transporting astronauts to the International Space Station (ISS), as well as other activities in orbit. Some, such as Houston-based Axiom Space, eventually want to build their own space stations in orbit, where commercial astronauts could make extended stays.<\/p>\n

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This could also provide more money and opportunities for science to be carried out in low Earth orbit. But it also raises a host of safety concerns, because it will add to the already troublesome issue of space junk. There are also implications for the environment, because rockets produce greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change.\n<\/p>\n

Axiom, which was founded in 2016, was the first company to conduct privately funded missions to the ISS. Under Axiom’s Space Access Program, it has been offering different countries the opportunity to design customized missions to orbit aboard SpaceX’s Crew Dragon spacecraft. As such, it recently signed an agreement with the UK Space Agency for an all-UK astronaut mission to the ISS.\n<\/p>\n

Nasa is increasingly partnering with private companies to accomplish its space missions. However, initiatives such as the one with Axiom to fly multiple tourist missions to the ISS mark a new kind of commercialization of space.\n<\/p>\n

Axiom’s planned commercial space station will first be built as an add-on to the ISS. It will then be detached so that it becomes independent. Space tourism is a key part of its business model.\n<\/p>\n

Axiom is not alone in its aims. Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin, aerospace giant Northop Grumman, and smaller companies such as Nanoracks and Sierra Space are all developing their own space station designs. These are aimed at operating in low Earth orbit within the next decade.\n<\/p>\n

Blue Origin, Northrop Grumman and Nanoracks have been awarded US$415 million (\u00a3335 million) by Nasa under the agency’s Low Earth Economy strategy to develop their space station concepts. In effect, the Nasa strategy uses public money to enable private companies to bring in commercial money. This private investment then helps provide the infrastructure needed for science and operations in low Earth orbit.\n<\/p>\n

The scientific case for putting humans in space has historically been very weak\u2014though not non-existent. Modern robotics and remote-control systems are now so good that the case is even weaker today than it ever was.\n<\/p>\n

To most scientists, human space missions are vanity projects to do with national prestige. However, most will concede that there are huge benefits in terms of public engagement and inspiration. If they were fully costed, though, it’s unlikely that some experiments would be funded by the peer review panels of the science funding agencies.<\/p>\n

Space junk concerns<\/h2>\n

There are also major concerns about risks posed by the increase in the general number of space missions, particularly because space junk is already a major problem in low Earth orbit. In 1978, Nasa scientist Donald J Kessler described the “Kessler syndrome”\u2014a potential runaway effect where a collision in space could spark many more debris impacts, leading to the destruction of multiple spacecraft, or even the majority of low Earth orbit spacecraft.\n<\/p>\n