1 00:00:00,800 --> 00:00:02,256 Our lives depend 2 00:00:02,280 --> 00:00:04,040 on a world we can't see. 3 00:00:04,920 --> 00:00:06,936 Think about your week so far. 4 00:00:06,960 --> 00:00:10,176 Have you watched TV, used GPS, 5 00:00:10,200 --> 00:00:13,160 checked the weather or even ate a meal? 6 00:00:13,720 --> 00:00:16,416 These many things that enable our daily lives 7 00:00:16,440 --> 00:00:19,296 rely either directly or indirectly 8 00:00:19,320 --> 00:00:21,016 on satellites. 9 00:00:21,040 --> 00:00:22,976 And while we often take for granted 10 00:00:23,000 --> 00:00:25,536 the services that satellites provide us, 11 00:00:25,560 --> 00:00:28,376 the satellites themselves deserve our attention 12 00:00:28,400 --> 00:00:30,376 as they are leaving a lasting mark 13 00:00:30,400 --> 00:00:32,119 on the space they occupy. 14 00:00:32,720 --> 00:00:36,336 People around the world rely on satellite infrastructure every day 15 00:00:36,360 --> 00:00:40,416 for information, entertainment and to communicate. 16 00:00:40,440 --> 00:00:43,296 There's agricultural and environmental monitoring, 17 00:00:43,320 --> 00:00:46,376 Internet connectivity, navigation. 18 00:00:46,400 --> 00:00:48,096 Satellites even play a role 19 00:00:48,120 --> 00:00:51,600 in the operation of our financial and energy markets. 20 00:00:52,120 --> 00:00:54,016 But these satellites that we rely on 21 00:00:54,040 --> 00:00:55,696 day in and day out 22 00:00:55,720 --> 00:00:57,376 have a finite life. 23 00:00:57,400 --> 00:00:59,296 They might run out of propellant, 24 00:00:59,320 --> 00:01:00,856 they could malfunction, 25 00:01:00,880 --> 00:01:04,575 or they may just naturally reach the end of their mission life. 26 00:01:04,599 --> 00:01:08,736 At this point, these satellites effectively become space junk, 27 00:01:08,760 --> 00:01:11,080 cluttering the orbital environment. 28 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:15,456 So imagine you're driving down the highway on a beautiful, sunny day 29 00:01:15,480 --> 00:01:16,896 out running errands. 30 00:01:16,920 --> 00:01:18,576 You've got your music cranked, 31 00:01:18,600 --> 00:01:20,056 your windows rolled down, 32 00:01:20,080 --> 00:01:22,776 with the cool breeze blowing through your hair. 33 00:01:22,800 --> 00:01:24,000 Feels nice, right? 34 00:01:24,640 --> 00:01:27,016 Everything is going smoothly 35 00:01:27,040 --> 00:01:29,696 until suddenly your car stutters and stalls 36 00:01:29,720 --> 00:01:31,560 right in the middle of the highway. 37 00:01:32,160 --> 00:01:35,456 So now you have no choice but to abandon your car 38 00:01:35,480 --> 00:01:36,920 where it is on the highway. 39 00:01:38,200 --> 00:01:39,536 Maybe you were lucky enough 40 00:01:39,560 --> 00:01:42,456 to be able to move it out of the way and into a shoulder lane 41 00:01:42,480 --> 00:01:44,616 so that it's out of the way of other traffic. 42 00:01:44,640 --> 00:01:45,896 A couple of hours ago, 43 00:01:45,920 --> 00:01:50,400 your car was a useful machine that you relied on in your everyday life. 44 00:01:51,000 --> 00:01:53,536 Now, it's a useless hunk of metal 45 00:01:53,560 --> 00:01:57,240 taking up space in a valuable transportation network. 46 00:01:57,920 --> 00:02:02,096 And imagine international roadways all cluttered with broken down vehicles 47 00:02:02,120 --> 00:02:04,976 that are just getting in the way of other traffic. 48 00:02:05,000 --> 00:02:07,896 And imagine the debris that would be strewn everywhere 49 00:02:07,920 --> 00:02:10,376 if a collision actually happened, 50 00:02:10,400 --> 00:02:12,776 thousands of smaller pieces of debris 51 00:02:12,800 --> 00:02:14,720 becoming new obstacles. 52 00:02:15,680 --> 00:02:19,256 This is the paradigm of the satellite industry. 53 00:02:19,280 --> 00:02:21,416 Satellites that are no longer working 54 00:02:21,440 --> 00:02:25,256 are often left to deorbit over many, many years, 55 00:02:25,280 --> 00:02:28,816 or only moved out of the way as a temporary solution. 56 00:02:28,840 --> 00:02:31,096 And there are no international laws in space 57 00:02:31,120 --> 00:02:33,760 to enforce us to clean up after ourselves. 58 00:02:34,680 --> 00:02:36,936 So the world's first satellite, Sputnik I, 59 00:02:36,960 --> 00:02:39,216 was launched in 1957, 60 00:02:39,240 --> 00:02:42,880 and in that year, there were only a total of three launch attempts. 61 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:47,056 Decades later and dozens of countries from all around the world 62 00:02:47,080 --> 00:02:50,456 have launched thousands of more satellites into orbit, 63 00:02:50,480 --> 00:02:54,216 and the frequency of launches is only going to increase in the future, 64 00:02:54,240 --> 00:02:56,816 especially if you consider things like the possibility 65 00:02:56,840 --> 00:03:00,440 of 900-plus satellite constellations being launched. 66 00:03:01,560 --> 00:03:03,616 Now, we send satellites to different orbits 67 00:03:03,640 --> 00:03:05,696 depending on what they're needed for. 68 00:03:05,720 --> 00:03:08,056 One of the most common places we send satellites 69 00:03:08,080 --> 00:03:09,656 is the low Earth orbit, 70 00:03:09,680 --> 00:03:11,656 possibly to image the surface of Earth 71 00:03:11,680 --> 00:03:14,080 at up to about 2,000 kilometers altitude. 72 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:18,176 Satellites there are naturally buffeted by Earth's atmosphere, 73 00:03:18,200 --> 00:03:20,136 so their orbits naturally decay, 74 00:03:20,160 --> 00:03:21,696 and they'll eventually burn up, 75 00:03:21,720 --> 00:03:23,680 probably within a couple of decades. 76 00:03:24,440 --> 00:03:26,536 Another common place we send satellites 77 00:03:26,560 --> 00:03:28,216 is the geostationary orbit 78 00:03:28,240 --> 00:03:30,840 at about 35,000 kilometers altitude. 79 00:03:31,320 --> 00:03:35,496 Satellites there remain in the same place above Earth as the Earth rotates, 80 00:03:35,520 --> 00:03:39,800 which enables things like communications or television broadcast, for example. 81 00:03:40,440 --> 00:03:44,760 Satellites in high orbits like these could remain there for centuries. 82 00:03:45,960 --> 00:03:49,136 And then there's the orbit coined "the graveyard," 83 00:03:49,160 --> 00:03:51,776 the ominous junk or disposal orbits, 84 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:54,656 where some satellites are intentionally placed 85 00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:55,896 at the end of their life 86 00:03:55,920 --> 00:03:59,680 so that they're out of the way of common operational orbits. 87 00:04:00,800 --> 00:04:05,376 Of the nearly 7,000 satellites launched since the late 1950s, 88 00:04:05,400 --> 00:04:08,760 only about one in seven is currently operational, 89 00:04:09,360 --> 00:04:12,256 and in addition to the satellites that are no longer working, 90 00:04:12,280 --> 00:04:15,776 there's also hundreds of thousands of marble-sized debris 91 00:04:15,800 --> 00:04:18,216 and millions of paint chip-sized debris 92 00:04:18,240 --> 00:04:20,240 that are also orbiting around the Earth. 93 00:04:20,880 --> 00:04:23,656 Space debris is a major risk to space missions, 94 00:04:23,680 --> 00:04:27,680 but also to the satellites that we rely on each and every day. 95 00:04:28,520 --> 00:04:31,936 Now, because space debris and junk has become increasingly worrisome, 96 00:04:31,960 --> 00:04:34,576 there have been some national and international efforts 97 00:04:34,600 --> 00:04:36,096 to develop technical standards 98 00:04:36,120 --> 00:04:39,040 to help us limit the generation of additional debris. 99 00:04:39,480 --> 00:04:41,736 So for example, there are recommendations 100 00:04:41,760 --> 00:04:43,856 for those low-Earth orbiting spacecraft 101 00:04:43,880 --> 00:04:47,296 to be made to deorbit in under 25 years, 102 00:04:47,320 --> 00:04:49,416 but that's still a really long time, 103 00:04:49,440 --> 00:04:52,760 especially if a satellite hasn't been working for years. 104 00:04:53,320 --> 00:04:56,376 There's also mandates for those dead geostationary spacecraft 105 00:04:56,400 --> 00:04:58,640 to be moved into a graveyard orbit. 106 00:04:59,480 --> 00:05:03,176 But neither of these guidelines is binding under international law, 107 00:05:03,200 --> 00:05:07,976 and the understanding is that they will be implemented through national mechanisms. 108 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:10,456 These guidelines are also not long-term, 109 00:05:10,480 --> 00:05:11,896 they're not proactive, 110 00:05:11,920 --> 00:05:15,256 nor do they address the debris that's already up there. 111 00:05:15,280 --> 00:05:19,120 They're only in place to limit the future creation of debris. 112 00:05:19,680 --> 00:05:22,840 Space junk is no one's responsibility. 113 00:05:23,680 --> 00:05:26,536 Now, Mount Everest is actually an interesting comparison 114 00:05:26,560 --> 00:05:29,776 of a new approach to how we interact with our environments, 115 00:05:29,800 --> 00:05:32,096 as it's often given the dubious honor 116 00:05:32,120 --> 00:05:35,120 of being the world's highest garbage dump. 117 00:05:36,040 --> 00:05:39,296 Decades after the first conquest of the world's highest peak, 118 00:05:39,320 --> 00:05:41,576 tons of rubbish left behind by climbers 119 00:05:41,600 --> 00:05:43,536 has started to raise concern, 120 00:05:43,560 --> 00:05:46,296 and you may have read in the news that there's speculation 121 00:05:46,320 --> 00:05:48,376 that Nepal will crack down on mountaineers 122 00:05:48,400 --> 00:05:51,960 with stricter enforcement of penalties and legal obligations. 123 00:05:52,600 --> 00:05:55,016 The goal, of course, is to persuade climbers 124 00:05:55,040 --> 00:05:57,216 to clean up after themselves, 125 00:05:57,240 --> 00:06:02,136 so maybe local not-for-profits will pay climbers who bring down extra waste, 126 00:06:02,160 --> 00:06:05,640 or expeditions might organize voluntary cleanup trips. 127 00:06:06,120 --> 00:06:08,376 And yet still many climbers feel 128 00:06:08,400 --> 00:06:11,640 that independent groups should police themselves. 129 00:06:12,120 --> 00:06:14,936 There's no simple or easy answer, 130 00:06:14,960 --> 00:06:18,016 and even well-intentioned efforts at conservation 131 00:06:18,040 --> 00:06:19,880 often run into problems. 132 00:06:20,320 --> 00:06:23,416 But that doesn't mean we shouldn't do everything in our power 133 00:06:23,440 --> 00:06:26,760 to protect the environments that we rely and depend on, 134 00:06:27,440 --> 00:06:31,456 and like Everest, the remote location and inadequate infrastructure 135 00:06:31,480 --> 00:06:32,896 of the orbital environment 136 00:06:32,920 --> 00:06:35,280 make waste disposal a challenging problem. 137 00:06:35,920 --> 00:06:38,456 But we simply cannot reach new heights 138 00:06:38,480 --> 00:06:41,536 and create an even higher garbage dump, 139 00:06:41,560 --> 00:06:43,720 one that's out of this world. 140 00:06:45,280 --> 00:06:46,496 The reality of space 141 00:06:46,520 --> 00:06:49,096 is that if a component on a satellite breaks down, 142 00:06:49,120 --> 00:06:52,016 there really are limited opportunities for repairs, 143 00:06:52,040 --> 00:06:54,080 and only at great cost. 144 00:06:54,760 --> 00:06:58,256 But what if we were smarter about how we designed satellites? 145 00:06:58,280 --> 00:06:59,576 What if all satellites, 146 00:06:59,600 --> 00:07:01,896 regardless of what country they were built in, 147 00:07:01,920 --> 00:07:03,816 had to be standardized in some way 148 00:07:03,840 --> 00:07:06,376 for recycling, servicing 149 00:07:06,400 --> 00:07:07,880 or active deorbiting? 150 00:07:08,560 --> 00:07:12,096 What if there actually were international laws with teeth 151 00:07:12,120 --> 00:07:14,896 that enforced end-of-life disposal of satellites 152 00:07:14,920 --> 00:07:17,056 instead of moving them out of the way 153 00:07:17,080 --> 00:07:18,680 as a temporary solution? 154 00:07:19,560 --> 00:07:22,496 Or maybe satellite manufacturers need to be charged a deposit 155 00:07:22,520 --> 00:07:24,816 to even launch a satellite into orbit, 156 00:07:24,840 --> 00:07:27,296 and that deposit would only be returned 157 00:07:27,320 --> 00:07:29,856 if the satellite was disposed of properly 158 00:07:29,880 --> 00:07:32,600 or if they cleaned up some quota of debris. 159 00:07:33,440 --> 00:07:36,016 Or maybe a satellite needs to have technology on board 160 00:07:36,040 --> 00:07:37,800 to help accelerate deorbit. 161 00:07:38,720 --> 00:07:40,976 There are some encouraging signs. 162 00:07:41,000 --> 00:07:45,696 The UK's TechDemoSat-1, launched in 2014, for example, 163 00:07:45,720 --> 00:07:47,656 was designed for end-of-life disposal 164 00:07:47,680 --> 00:07:49,616 via a small drag sail. 165 00:07:49,640 --> 00:07:52,216 This works for the satellite because it's small, 166 00:07:52,240 --> 00:07:55,936 but satellites that are higher or in larger orbits 167 00:07:55,960 --> 00:07:58,816 or are larger altogether, like the size of school buses, 168 00:07:58,840 --> 00:08:01,256 will require other disposal options. 169 00:08:01,280 --> 00:08:04,256 So maybe you get into things like high-powered lasers 170 00:08:04,280 --> 00:08:06,096 or tugging using nets or tethers, 171 00:08:06,120 --> 00:08:08,440 as crazy as those sound in the short term. 172 00:08:09,160 --> 00:08:11,056 And then one really cool possibility 173 00:08:11,080 --> 00:08:14,400 is the idea of orbital tow trucks or space mechanics. 174 00:08:14,840 --> 00:08:16,456 Imagine if a robotic arm 175 00:08:16,480 --> 00:08:18,336 on some sort of space tow truck 176 00:08:18,360 --> 00:08:20,656 could fix the broken components on a satellite, 177 00:08:20,680 --> 00:08:22,520 making them usable again. 178 00:08:23,240 --> 00:08:25,176 Or what if that very same robotic arm 179 00:08:25,200 --> 00:08:27,536 could refuel the propellant tank on a spacecraft 180 00:08:27,560 --> 00:08:29,536 that relies on chemical propulsion 181 00:08:29,560 --> 00:08:33,039 just like you or I would refuel the fuel tanks on our cars? 182 00:08:33,559 --> 00:08:35,216 Robotic repair and maintenance 183 00:08:35,240 --> 00:08:38,960 could extend the lives of hundreds of satellites orbiting around the Earth. 184 00:08:40,280 --> 00:08:43,176 Whatever the disposal or cleanup options we come up with, 185 00:08:43,200 --> 00:08:46,176 it's clearly not just a technical problem. 186 00:08:46,200 --> 00:08:51,256 There's also complex space laws and politics that we have to sort out. 187 00:08:51,280 --> 00:08:55,440 Simply put, we haven't found a way to use space sustainably yet. 188 00:08:56,720 --> 00:08:59,616 Exploring, innovating to change the way we live and work 189 00:08:59,640 --> 00:09:01,616 are what we as humans do, 190 00:09:01,640 --> 00:09:03,136 and in space exploration, 191 00:09:03,160 --> 00:09:06,416 we're literally moving beyond the boundaries of Earth. 192 00:09:06,440 --> 00:09:10,096 But as we push thresholds in the name of learning and innovation, 193 00:09:10,120 --> 00:09:15,600 we must remember that accountability for our environments never goes away. 194 00:09:16,520 --> 00:09:20,696 There is without doubt congestion in the low Earth and geostationary orbits, 195 00:09:20,720 --> 00:09:23,056 and we cannot keep launching new satellites 196 00:09:23,080 --> 00:09:25,376 to replace the ones that have broken down 197 00:09:25,400 --> 00:09:27,456 without doing something about them first, 198 00:09:27,480 --> 00:09:29,936 just like we would never leave a broken down car 199 00:09:29,960 --> 00:09:31,360 in the middle of the highway. 200 00:09:31,760 --> 00:09:33,336 Next time you use your phone, 201 00:09:33,360 --> 00:09:35,856 check the weather or use your GPS, 202 00:09:35,880 --> 00:09:40,136 think about the satellite technologies that make those activities possible. 203 00:09:40,160 --> 00:09:42,016 But also think about the very impact 204 00:09:42,040 --> 00:09:45,336 that the satellites have on the environment surrounding Earth, 205 00:09:45,360 --> 00:09:50,056 and help spread the message that together we must reduce our impact. 206 00:09:50,080 --> 00:09:52,616 Earth orbit is breathtakingly beautiful 207 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:55,216 and our gateway to exploration. 208 00:09:55,240 --> 00:09:57,760 It's up to us to keep it that way. 209 00:09:59,160 --> 00:10:00,376 Thank you. 210 00:10:00,400 --> 00:10:02,480 (Applause)