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  2. How LEO satellite technology can connect the unconnected

    www.weforum.org/stories/2022/02/explainer-how-low-earth-orbit-satellite...

    Low-earth orbit (LEO) satellites can help connect the unconnected and bridge the digital divide. The race to deploy LEO satellite constellations is increasingly competitive and will require multi-stakeholder cooperation to deliver inclusive connectivity. The World Economic Forum’s EDISON Alliance is mobilizing a global movement of leaders ...

  3. Where does space junk come from – and how do we clean it up?

    www.weforum.org/stories/2021/05/why-we-need-to-clean-up-space-junk-debris-low...

    Some debris is created naturally from the impacts of micrometeoroids – dust-sized fragments of asteroids and comets. With limited lifetimes, operational satellites can become space debris. Satellites run out of maneuvering fuel, batteries wear out, solar panels degrade – causing an orbital debris feedback loop, in which the problem is ...

  4. Space junk: what it is and why cleaning it up matters

    www.weforum.org/stories/2021/05/space-junk-clean-satellite

    Space junk can travel at 40,000km an hour and can destroy satellite communications. A new space mission is aiming to capture and remove space debris from orbit. In November 2021, the crew of the International Space Station were forced to take shelter onboard to avoid being struck by pieces of a broken satellite orbiting Earth. Just eight months ...

  5. UN calls for space regulation as Earth's orbit gets more crowded...

    www.weforum.org/stories/2023/09/space-regulation-satellites-spacejunk

    The UN report notes that “the number of satellites launched into outer space has increased at an exponential rate from 210 in 2013 to 600 in 2019, to 1,200 in 2020, and to 2,470 in 2022.”. These recent launches are adding to the congestion in low-Earth orbit. The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) keeps a database of all satellites deployed.

  6. Global Risks Report 2022 - The World Economic Forum

    www.weforum.org/publications/global-risks-report-2022/in-full/chapter-5...

    Once in orbit, and unless actively decommissioned, many of these satellites could remain in space for hundreds of years. 14 Smaller, low-cost satellites are also proliferating because of lower costs and fewer barriers to entry. 15 While the risk is still relatively low, an increase in the number of satellites also increases the opportunity for collisions, or, at the least, a need to engage in ...

  7. Why space debris is a growing problem | World Economic Forum

    www.weforum.org/stories/2023/06/orbital-debris-space-junk-removal

    Share: Space-related technologies have allowed people in remote areas to access the internet, and have powered numerous innovations. This and future progress is under threat because of orbital debris, human-made objects in orbit that no longer serve a useful function. These pieces of debris travel several times faster than a bullet; a collision ...

  8. These are the top 10 emerging technologies of 2021

    www.weforum.org/stories/2021/11/these-are-the-top-10-emerging-technologies-of-2021

    With the recent advent of countless low-cost microsatellites in low earth orbit able to capture such data globally and download it to central facilities for processing, the IoT will enable unprecedented levels of global understanding—encompassing previously inaccessible developing regions devoid of traditional Internet infrastructure.

  9. The space sector is evolving rapidly, with new public- and private-sector actors propelling it towards commercial launch and space tourism, ever-larger constellations that provide connectivity and ever-more precise Earth observation, as well as partnerships for lunar exploration and beyond. As the domain undergoes this important transformation, the Global Future Council on Space will explore ...

  10. How Earth observation satellites aid climate change research |...

    www.weforum.org/stories/2024/05/earth-observation-satellites-climate-change...

    By 2030, the Earth observation field is expected to contribute over $700 billion to the global economy and reduce annual greenhouse gases by 2Gt, according to a new World Economic Forum report. When ERS-2 came spiralling down to Earth in March, it wasn’t just another satellite burning up in the atmosphere.

  11. Why space exploration is vital to humanity: NASA's former chief...

    www.weforum.org/stories/2022/10/space-exploration-mars-moon-nasa-smithsonian

    Oct 28, 2022. Ellen Stofan, Former NASA Chief Scientist, on why space exploration is vital to humanity. Humans are about to return to the Moon, and are working on a mission to Mars. Former NASA chief scientist Ellen Stofan and current undersecretary for science and research at the Smithsonian explains why space exploration is so important for ...