The Kessler Syndrome, first theorized by NASA scientist Donald Kessler in 1978, is no longer a distant hypothetical. When an active American communications satellite collided with a defunct Russian satellite on February 10th, 2009, at 22,300 miles per hour, it scattered more than 23,000 trackable debris objects and an estimated 100 million smaller fragments into low-Earth orbit (LEO).
Today, companies like Astroscale are racing to develop active debris removal (ADR) technology before orbital overcrowding triggers an irreversible chain-reaction of collisions.
The barrier to launching satellites has dropped dramatically — SpaceX alone has reduced launch costs by over 90% through reusable rocket technology — meaning China, Amazon, and countless private operators are flooding LEO with new constellations faster than any international regulatory body can respond. With Starlink already operating thousands of satellites and a license filed for up to one million objects, the orbital environment is approaching what scientists describe as a tipping point: roughly 70,000 objects in LEO is the threshold beyond which collision cascades become self-sustaining and unstoppable, regardless of whether new launches cease entirely.
The space debris crisis is inseparable from a deeper question about market power, monopoly risk, and the long-term governance of the space economy. SpaceX's dominance in orbital launch, satellite internet, and crewed spaceflight has produced extraordinary short-term innovation — but former NASA Administrator Jim Bridenstine's warning that "a private monopoly that the government is dependent on" poses unique dangers is becoming harder to dismiss.
The US military's submarines, aircraft carriers, and intelligence infrastructure are increasingly reliant on SpaceX's Starlink connectivity and launch capabilities, raising urgent questions about what happens when a single private actor controls the physical infrastructure of a space-to-Earth economy worth trillions.
The tragedy of the commons — the economic principle whereby individuals exploit a shared resource in their own interest until it is destroyed — maps directly onto orbital space: every satellite operator externalizes the debris cost onto every other current and future user of LEO.
Without binding international coordination mechanisms, investment in debris remediation, and genuine competitive alternatives to SpaceX in the launch market, the space economy risks replicating — and amplifying — the worst failures of terrestrial economics in the most consequential new frontier humanity has ever opened.
We're reading Space To Grow by Matthew Weinzierl and Brendan Rosseau, this is Part 4.
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Timestamps
(00:00) How 150,000 pieces of space junk ended up in orbit and why nobody cleaned them up
(06:21) Kessler syndrome explained: the tipping point where collisions become unstoppable
(10:57) Why the insurance market is not pricing orbital collision risk
(13:50) Government intervention, the Moon Treaty and the five-year deorbit rule
(20:26) Active debris removal: magnets, robots and who is building the solutions
(22:37) Astroscale: how one company is trying to clean up space junk commercially
(24:53) Who pays to clean up orbit when the market has no incentive to
(26:26) Is SpaceX a monopoly and does that matter for the space industry
(29:08) NASA Administrator: there is only one thing worse than a government monopoly
(33:04) Space governance, coordination and whether the tragedy of the commons can be solved in orbit