26 March 2026

Space Junk Removal

One of the industries of the future will be space junk removal. 

There is already a movie about it (Space Sweepers 2021 S. Korean).
Orbital debris in Earth orbit is not adequately described as a static inventory problem. It is a coupled operations-stability problem governed by shell occupancy, collision kernel, breakup severity, and orbital residence time. The near-term orbital sustainability is controlled by three variables: disposal reliability for newly launched spacecraft, encounter-state uncertainty in the high-risk conjunction tail, and the residual hazard stock of inactive high-mass legacy objects.

Using public ESA, NASA, FCC, NOAA, JAXA, and OECD sources through 2026, we develop a reduced-order control framework for intervention ranking and market formation. Current ESA statistics indicate ~44,870 tracked objects in Earth orbit, more than 15,800 tonnes of orbiting mass, and model-based populations of ~5.4e4 objects larger than 10cm, 1.2e6 in the 1 - 10cm regime, and 1.4e8 in the 0.1 - 1cm regime.

Operationally, the environment is already visible in constellation-scale workload: public reporting by SpaceX indicates that Starlink collision-avoidance maneuvers rose from 6,873 in 12/2021-05/2022 to 144,404 in 12/2024-05/2025. Physically, the present LEO environment shows a separation between the traffic peak near 500-600 km, which drives conjunction workload, and the persistence-driven risk peak near ~850km, where long lifetime/inactive intact mass dominate long-horizon hazard; under current assumptions, 96% of the LEO index is inactive objects.

NASA studies indicate benefit-cost ratios of 20-750 for shortening disposal timelines from 25 to 15 years and greater than 100 for targeted uncertainty reduction in high-risk conjunctions. The analysis implies that orbital-debris services will not emerge as a single homogeneous market, but as a result of linked markets: compliance-led mitigation for new missions, prepared end-of-life servicing and premium SSA overlays, and publicly anchored remediation of the legacy stock.
Slava G. Turyshev, "Orbital Debris in Earth Orbit: Operations, Stability, Control, and Market Formation" arXiv:2603.23552 (March 22, 2026).