APR 09, 2024
RELEASE 24-051
Low Earth orbit, the focus of volume one of NASAâs Space Sustainability Strategy, is the most concentrated area for orbital debris. This
computer-generated image showcases objects that are currently being tracked.
Credits: NASA ODPO
To address a rapidly changing space operating environment and ensure its preservation for generations to come, NASA released the first part of its integrated Space
Sustainability Strategy, on Tuesday advancing the agencyâs role as a global leader on this crucial issue.
âThe release of this strategy marks true progress for NASA on space sustainability,â said NASA Deputy Administrator Pam Melroy. âSpace is busy â and only getting busier. If we want
to make sure that critical parts of space are preserved so that our children and grandchildren can continue to use them for the benefit of humanity, the time to act is now. NASA is making sure that weâre aligning our resources to support sustainable activity
for us and for all.â
For decades, NASA has served as a proactive leader for responsible and sustainable space operations. Entities across the agency develop best practices, analytic tools, and technologies
widely adopted by operators around the world. The new strategy seeks to integrate those efforts through a whole-of-agency approach â allowing NASA to focus its resources on the most pressing issues. To facilitate that integration, NASA will appoint a new director
of space sustainability to coordinate activities across the agency.
Key aspects of our approach include providing global leadership in space sustainability, supporting equitable access to space, and ensuring NASAâs missions and operations enhance space
sustainability.â¯
Space environments currently are seeing the rapid emergence of commercial capabilities, many of them championed by NASA. These capabilities include increased low Earth orbit satellite
activity and plans for the use of satellite constellations, autonomous spacecraft, and commercial space destinations. However, this increased activity also has generated challenges, such as an operating environment more crowded with spacecraft and increased
debris. Understanding the risks and benefits associated with this growth is crucial for space sustainability.â¯
Developed under the leadership of a crossagency advisory board, the space sustainability strategy focuses on advancements NASA can make toward measuring and assessing space sustainability
in Earth orbit, identifying cost-effective ways to meet sustainability targets, incentivizing the adoption of sustainable practices through technology and policy development, and increasing efforts to share and receive information with the rest of the global
space community.
NASAâs approach to space sustainability recognizes four operational domains: Earth, Earth orbit, the orbital area near and around the Moon known as cislunar space, and deep space, including
other celestial bodies. The first volume of the strategy focuses on sustainability in Earth orbit. NASA plans to produce additional volumes focusing on the other domains.
Learn more about the Space Sustainability Strategy at:
https://www.nasa.gov/spacesustainability
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