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Debris in outer space: who should clean it up?

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28 May 2025
There is more and more activity in space, but with it also an increase in pollution. The Space Law & Sustainability Center of the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam is the first center to study space law from a sustainability perspective.

Space lawyer Ioana Bratu (Amsterdam Law & Technology Institute) and environmental policy professor Philipp Pattberg (Amsterdam Sustainability Institute) founded the center.

Space debris
More and more space launches are taking place from various countries. This is useful for our increasingly digital lives on Earth since we rely on communication and navigation satellites, for example, but it also causes a problem: when space technology is no longer operational, there is no legally binding obligation in place obliging all actors to remove the debris from outer space. While some operational guidelines and standards exist, these are not sufficient. 

The pollution caused by debris leads to dangerous situations, Bratu notes: “The pieces of space debris, can collide with still functioning space technology or, as recent incidents revealed, they may end up falling on Earth. In one case, a piece of debris smashed through a roof, narrowly missing a child living in the house. Moreover, there is growing concern on the environmental impact caused by debris when they re-enter Earth’s atmosphere, since they might increase climate change.”

Different causes
Some space pollution occurs accidentally. Sometimes, however, it is also caused deliberately, for example by countries destroying their own satellites. “This can be a way to exercise power,” says Bratu. “The existing legislation does not offer sufficient protection.”

Space debris is not the only sustainability problem in space. The militarization of space, the commercialization of space travel and the deployment of advanced technologies, such as artificial intelligence, also lead to legal and sustainability issues.

Multidisciplinary approaches
The Space Law & Sustainability Center brings together representatives from various disciplines for research, seminars and outreach.

Pattberg: “The Space Law & Sustainability Center is a fantastic example of what the Amsterdam Sustainability Institute is all about: supporting interdisciplinary collaboration that makes a positive difference for society. While the issue of space debris might sound far away, at its core is the question of progress and responsibility that plays out across many current questions. How can we balance our human impulse for innovation and experimentation with an urgent need for responsibility and restraint in the context of (trans-)planetary crises?"

The center will be launched on June 20 with a conference bringing together Dutch and international speakers to discuss multidisciplinary approaches to sustainability in space.

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