China warns Starlink satellites pose safety risks

Beijing's representative at a UN Security Council informal meeting initiated by Russia highlighted safety and security risks from SpaceX's Starlink satellites, citing near-misses with the Chinese space station and their use by criminals and terrorists.

At an informal United Nations Security Council meeting initiated by Russia on Monday, Beijing's representative cited several incidents, including near collisions between Starlink satellites and the Chinese space station in 2021, and a satellite that disintegrated in December.

The comments came shortly after a senior Starlink executive reported a near miss between one of the company's satellites and a newly launched Chinese satellite, accusing the Chinese side of failing to coordinate with other satellites.

“In recent years, humanity has made new progress in the exploration and use of outer space,” the representative said, according to a statement from Beijing’s UN mission that did not name the diplomat.

“At the same time, it must also be noted that, with the rapid expansion of commercial space activities, the unchecked proliferation of commercial satellite constellations by a certain country, in the absence of effective regulation, has given rise to pronounced safety and security challenges.”

Keywords in the statement include the Outer Space Treaty, Elon Musk, Chinese space station, Qianfan broadband network, Russia, Chinese astronauts, Guowang network, Starlink, SpaceX, and United Nations Security Council. The event underscores growing concerns over unregulated commercial satellite growth and its implications for global space safety.

مقالات ذات صلة

China's official military newspaper PLA Daily has warned of an accelerating arms race over low-Earth orbit satellites, citing SpaceX’s recent contract with the US Space Force as an example.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

China launched a satellite group on Tuesday to form part of a commercial low-orbit network called the Spacesail Constellation.

Satellite burn-ups, especially from SpaceX's Starlink constellation, release tons of metals like aluminum oxide into the mesosphere daily. This human-made injection now rivals or exceeds natural cosmic dust inputs, raising concerns about ozone depletion and orbital debris. Scientists warn of parallels to past environmental damage in oceans and the atmosphere.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokeswoman Mao Ning described the launch of Shenzhou-23 and arrival of Hong Kong payload specialist Lai Ka-ying at Tiangong as a historic milestone.

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