Space industry urges Congress not to ax satellite collisions system
Share this @internewscast.com


WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Hundreds of U.S. companies on Tuesday urged Congress to back off a plan to kill a small federal office tasked with managing satellite traffic in space, a badly needed civilian effort initiated by President Donald Trump’s first administration but now imperiled by cuts.

The White House’s 2026 budget proposal seeks $10 million for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Office of Space Commerce, an 84% cut from the office’s 2025 funding that would terminate Traffic Coordination System for Space (TraCSS), a civilian system to help prevent satellite collisions and alert operators of potential crashes.


Amazon Prime Day Deals

— Prime Day 2025 is officially here find all the deals here

— Time for new AirPods? Here are the top Apple sales, live now

— Get a jump on back-to-school shopping with discounted must-haves

BestReviews is reader-supported and may earn an affiliate commission.


Four-hundred and fifty companies from seven different industry groups, including Elon Musk’s SpaceX and Amazon’s AMZN.O Kuiper satellite unit, wrote in a joint letter on Tuesday to the Senate committee overseeing NOAA that without funding TraCSS, “U.S. commercial and government satellite operators would face greater risks – putting critical missions in harm’s way, raising the cost of doing business, and potentially driving U.S. industry to relocate overseas.”

The rise of vast satellite constellations like SpaceX’s Starlink and heightened military and commercial activities in Earth’s orbit have driven up risks of collisions between the roughly 12,000 active satellites in space and thousands more pieces of uncontrollable junk, prompting efforts to create what is essentially a civil air traffic control system for space.

Audrey Schaffer, vice president of strategy and policy at space-tracking firm Slingshot Aerospace, said the cuts would forfeit an opportunity to shape global space traffic control as the U.S. did decades ago for international air traffic control standards, while Europe and China develop their own satellite traffic systems.

“It’s really important that there be coordination amongst these different systems, so we don’t have this fragmented system,” Schaffer said. “If the U.S. doesn’t have a system that it brings to the table, I’m not really sure how the U.S. exercises any leadership in the establishment of international space traffic management.”

The Pentagon has long managed a space traffic database called Space-Track, but defense and industry officials argue that responsibility detracts from its national security mission and risks conflating an essential safety service with military interests as other countries seek improvements to global satellite coordination.

The space industry in 2020 praised Trump’s first administration for directing the NOAA office to absorb the Pentagon’s space-tracking function and improve efforts to fuse satellite position data from countries and companies. The office has since released a trial version of TraCSS currently in use by some companies ahead of a full release planned for early next year.

But the Trump administration in a budget document last month explained it wants to terminate TraCSS because it did not complete the system during the prior administration and that private companies “have the capability and the business model” to do space traffic coordination on their own.

The two largest space industry organizations – the Commercial Space Federation and the American Institute of Aeronautics and Astronautics – wrote in another letter protesting the termination of TraCSS to senators on Monday that “industry believes that maintaining a basic SSA service at no cost to the end user is inherently a government function.”

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

Sailor at Naval Base San Diego Found Guilty of Sharing Secrets with China

SAN DIEGO (FOX 5/KUSI) A U.S. Navy sailor stationed at Naval Base…

Texas Senate Set to Vote on Proposed Changes to District Maps

() The Texas state Senate will vote on a bill that would…

Decrease in Violent Crime Following St. Louis Police Crackdown, Report Finds

() Crime is on the decline in St. Louis, according to the…

Meta Partners with Aiken Chamber of Commerce to Launch New Innovation Corridor

AIKEN, S.C. () – At the recent ‘State of Our Community’ gathering,…

Nebraska Governor Declares Immigration Detention Center ‘Ready to Go’

() A new immigration detention center in Nebraska will “make a big…

Federal Judge Issues Temporary Halt on Texas Law Mandating Ten Commandments in Schools

SAN ANTONIO, Texas (KXAN) A federal district court judge delivered a preliminary…

Filings Reveal Trump Has Invested Over $100 Million in Bonds Since January

Since commencing his second term in January, President Trump has acquired bonds…

Missouri Offers Historic Bridge for Free

() Have you ever gone up to somebody and asked them if…

Health Officials Report California Resident Tests Positive for Plague

(KTXL) A resident of South Lake Tahoe, California, has tested positive for…

Why Hasn’t the Georgia Suspect Been Extradited for the Arizona Murder that Happened 2 Months Ago?

A man from Tennessee facing charges for the violent murder of an…

Trump issues executive order targeting flag burning

President Trump intends to sign an executive order on Thursday aiming to…

Report: Missing Infant’s Sister Suffers Speech and Mobility Loss Due to Alleged Abuse

() New details have emerged about the injuries a missing baby’s sister…