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Satellites, science, and the new fight for spectrum in space

WHY IS IT IN NEWS?

  • new global race has emerged—not to reach the Moon, but to secure radio frequencies (spectrum) and orbital slots necessary for low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellite megaconstellations.
  • With over 50,000 satellites expected by 2030, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is under pressure as existing governance mechanisms struggle with congestion, interference, and debris.
  • ITU reforms (WRC-23, ITU-R 74) aim to address spectrum coordination and space sustainability, but compliance remains limited (70% deorbiting rate).
  • Megaconstellations are transforming global Internet access but risk deepening inequality and intensifying geopolitical competition.

Relevance

GS-II – International Relations & Global Governance

  • ITU as a global institution; Global Commons governance
  • Spectrum allocation disputes & geopolitics
  • Power asymmetry: developed vs emerging nations in space rule-making
  • Space as a strategic domain: communication, navigation, surveillance

GS-III – Science & Technology

  • Satellite megaconstellations & LEO technology
  • Space debris, orbital sustainability (ITU-R 74)
  • Space economy growth & innovation
  • Interference, spectrum congestion, orbital slot management

WHAT IS “SPECTRUM” AND WHY DOES IT MATTER?

a) Spectrum

  • Electromagnetic frequencies used for wireless communication.
  • Satellites need dedicated frequencies to transmit/receive signals without interference.

b) Most valued frequency bands

  • Ku-band (12–18 GHz) → high-speed Internet
  • Ka-band (26–40 GHz) → high-capacity broadband
  • L-band (1–2 GHz) → GPS, navigation

Radio frequencies are so vital that spectrum = oxygen for space communication.

c) Orbital slots

  • Precise physical positions in Earth’s orbit from which satellites can broadcast efficiently.
  • Scarce resource → intense competition → strategic race.

d) Why both spectrum + orbit matter

  • Spectrum prevents signal overlap
  • Orbit ensures correct coverage footprint

MEGACONSTELLATION BOOM: SCALE OF THE RACE

Major players

  • Starlink (SpaceX): 8,000+ satellites; plans for 42,000
  • OneWeb: 648 satellites
  • Amazon Project Kuiper: ~3,200
  • Chinas GuoWang: ~13,000

Market expansion

  • $4.27 billion (2024) → $27.31 billion (2032)
  • 25.5% CAGR driven by global broadband demand and lower launch costs.

Strategic dimensions

  • Nations view megaconstellations as key for:
    • Technological sovereignty
    • Secure communications
    • Intelligence and navigation
    • Digital infrastructure dominance

WHY REGULATION STRUGGLES: ITU AND THE SPECTRUM–ORBIT CRUNCH ?

a) ITUs role

  • UN agency coordinating spectrum and orbital slots.
  • Works on principle:
    Limited natural resources must be used rationally, efficiently, and economically.

b) First-come, first-served system

  • Favors wealthy operators who can file early applications.
  • Late entrants (developing nations) risk losing access to prime bands/orbits.

c) WRC-23 (World Radiocommunication Conference) reforms

Key decisions:

  1. Resolution 8:
    1. Operators must notify deviations between planned vs actual deployment.
    2. Prevents spectrum hoarding.
  2. Mandatory deployment milestones:
    1. 10% in 2 years
    2. 50% in 5 years
    3. 100% in 7 years
      Reduces speculative filings by companies seeking to lock future rights.

d) ITU under stress

  • Framework designed for hundreds of satellites → now facing tens of thousands annually.
  • 80% of ITU agenda today is satellite-related, revealing overload.

SUSTAINABILITY CHALLENGE: SPACE DEBRIS AND ITU-R 74

  • 2023 resolution for sustainable spectrum-orbit use:
    • Mandatory deorbit within 25 years post-mission.
  • Compliance is only ~70%, meaning debris accumulates faster than removal.

Current orbital conditions

  • 40,000 tracked objects in orbit
  • 27,000+ pieces of debris (>10 cm)
  • By 2030 → 50,000+ new satellites expected

Growing risk:

  • Collision cascade (Kessler syndrome)
  • Loss of space access for all

DIGITAL DIVIDE: PROMISE VS REALITY OF SATELLITE INTERNET

Why megaconstellations matter

  • LEO satellites (150–2,000 km)
    • Latency: 20–40 ms
    • Suitable for telemedicine, online education, remote work

But affordability is the bottleneck

  • Starlink terminal: ~$600 (₹53,000)
  • Monthly subscription charges → unaffordable for rural communities.
  • ITU estimates $2.6–2.8 trillion needed to close global digital divide by 2030.

Connectivity inequality

  • Global Connectivity Index:
    • Switzerland: 34.41
    • India: 8.59
    • A four-fold disparity
  • 2.6 billion people still offline (2025).

Without subsidies or universal service mandates, LEO Internet may widen inequality rather than solve it.

WHERE DOES INDIA STAND?

a) Indias strategic strengths

  • GSAT-N2: 48 Gbps throughput; covers remote regions (A&N Islands, Northeast).
  • OneWeb: Bharti owns 39% → India embedded in global LEO ecosystem.

b) Spectrum allocation debate

  • TRAI recommends administrative allocation, not auctions, for satellite spectrum.
    Rationale:
    • Satellite spectrum is inherently non-exclusive and shared.
    • Auctions could raise costs → reduce affordability → defeat universal access goals.

c) Indias dual challenge

  1. Secure spectrum & orbital resources internationally
  2. Ensure affordability domestically
    Without both, India risks losing out in the new space economy.

MACRO TRENDS SHAPING THE NEXT DECADE

A. Commercial imperatives

  • Internet markets + remote-region connectivity
  • Real-time applications (IoT, autonomous systems)

B. Geopolitical imperatives

  • Nations competing for:
    • Strategic communication
    • Surveillance
    • Navigation independence

C. Governance imperatives

  • Need for global rules on:
    • Spectrum equity
    • Orbital sustainability
    • Fair access for emerging nations

D. Risk of future conflict

Without reform →
Spectrum wars” → overcrowded space → unsafe, unequal, unusable orbital environment.


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