The largest piece of debris from Russia's 2021 destructive anti-satellite test (see 2111160063) reentered the atmosphere Sunday over the Arctic, astronomer Jonathan McDowell posted on X. Most of the 2,000+ pieces of debris from the test also have reentered the atmosphere since the test, he said.
AstroForge has become the first company to receive an FCC spectrum license for a commercial mission into deep space, it posted Monday on X. "We're excited to lead the charge in deep space exploration," the space mining company said. "With the FCC’s authorization, we are now full steam ahead," the company said. The FCC Office of Engineering and Technology experimental license was granted Oct. 18. AstroForge said its Odin craft will go on a two-year mission to conduct a fly-by of target asteroids and take high-resolution images to analyze the surface for docking sites in future missions. AstroForge craft will operate in the S band.
Eutelsat/OneWeb continues urging conditions on an SES purchase of Intelsat. In docket 24-267 reply comments posted Monday, it reiterated its argument (see 2410010018) that New SES' control of C-band channels in the U.S., and the importance of that spectrum for content distribution, necessitates considering whether conditions are needed to address those competitive impacts. Eutelsat/OneWeb didn't state specific conditions. SES and Intelsat, in comments also posted Monday, said C-band marketplace concerns, such as those that NAB voiced (see 2410160018), are "unfounded" because of the "fierce competition" New SES would face from fiber, internet-based streaming and other technologies.
The FAA licensed 148 space launches and reentries in FY 2024, compared to 113 in FY 2023, the agency said in an email Friday. "It was another safe and impressive year for the FAA and commercial space operators," it noted.
The U.S. needs to end years of debates about space regulatory reforms in favor of making decisions about issues such as who has mission authorization, according to Aerospace Corp. In a series of space policy papers Thursday, it also said the next presidential administration must make several space spectrum choices early in its term. Space spectrum matters that will demand attention, it said, include spectrum for lunar surface and lunar orbit communications and inter-satellite links from geostationary orbit to other orbits. It said there's a need for multi-orbit, multi-mission capable commercial terminals across various satellite constellations that will support the need for greater connectivity in the Arctic.
SpaceX and Amazon proposals for unavailability limits would make it impossible for non-geostationary orbit fixed satellite service operators to meet the high-availability requirements of public safety and government customers, Eutelsat/OneWeb said Thursday in docket 21-456. Recapping a meeting with FCC Space Bureau staffers in docket 21-456, Eutelsat/OneWeb said the limits SpaceX and Amazon's Kuiper are pushing are so relaxed that instead of coordination, operators will instead file technical compatibility studies that take up substantial FCC resources. Eutelsat/OneWeb discussed its support of O3b's rival proposal.
No perfect formula exists that addresses interference between non-geostationary orbit systems and so none will receive universal industry support, Telesat said Tuesday in docket 21-456. It said there's consensus on most issues in the proceeding, including use of a degraded throughput methodology to assess interference between NGSO systems. Telesat backed SpaceX's approach and argued against needing a Further NPRM, as O3b sought, aimed at getting input on rival interference protection proposals (see 2410150045).
Intelsat's Intelsat 33e satellite is "a total loss" due to an anomaly that occurred Saturday, the company said Monday. Migration of customers and service restoration plans are underway across Intelsat's other satellites and third-party satellites, it added. The company is coordinating with Boeing, the 33e manufacturer, and government agencies to analyze data and observations. A failure review board was convened to investigate the anomaly's cause. The geostationary satellite launched in August 2016 and served Europe, Africa and parts of Asia-Pacific. U.S. Space Force said it's tracking nearly 20 pieces of 33e, and that the debris poses no immediate threat.
Satellite operators are lobbying the FCC heavily about protecting earlier-round non-geostationary orbit systems from later-round NGSOs, but the industry is split on metrics. Meeting with the offices of all five FCC commissioners, Intelsat reiterated its backing for a 3% threshold in throughput degradation for long-term interference protection and a sliding-scale in degradation for short-term protection, according to a post in docket 21-456 Monday. It said Intelsat opposes a 0.4% flat degradation. Amazon's Kuiper said that there's industry consensus on numerous issues and that the agency should reject O3b's "bespoke and complicated formula" for calculating short-term interference threshold and instead go with the absolute short-term threshold within the range suggested by it -- 0.1% -- and SpaceX -- 0.4%. Kuiper said O3b's "overly protective" short-term threshold incentivizes incumbents to make unreasonable coordination demands and use its protections against new competitors. In meetings with the offices of the four regular commissioners, O3b said the 0.4% absolute change would hurt NGSO customers and competition. That approach, O3b added, would let later-round systems put higher levels of short-term interference on incumbents than a system in the same processing round could, under current processing round rules. O3b reiterated its call for a Further NPRM seeking input on the different short-term interference metric proposals (see 2410150045).
The Commerce Department's revised space-related export control rules announced Thursday are aimed at "further[ing] U.S. innovation and technology leadership while protecting U.S. national security and foreign policy interests," the agency said. Under the revised rules, Commerce is ending license requirements for exports to Australia, Canada and the U.K. of some items for remote sensing or space-based logistics, assembly or servicing spacecraft. It also is ending license requirements for the export of certain space components to more than 40 nations. And it's proposing to transfer jurisdiction of some defense-related space technology from the State Department's U.S. munitions list to Commerce's control list, meaning Commerce could use license exceptions to allow exports of that tech to allies. The rules changes are "a really big deal [and] the biggest change to space export controls since the Obama Admin reforms," Aerospace Corp. Systems Director Brian Weeden posted on LinkedIn Friday. The changes should help the U.S. "expand [its space] technological leadership into the future," Aerospace Industries Association CEO Eric Fanning said.