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Is the Space Industry Too Dependent on a Small Group of Semiconductor and Electronics...
The answer is yes. The space industry is too dependent on a small group of semiconductor and electronics suppliers, and the dependency is not limited to one country, one mission class, or one segment of the value chain. It appears in processors, memory, image sensors, power devices, field-programmable gate arrays, timing devices, packaging materials, and even the specialized test flow needed before a part is trusted for flight.
The Space Hotel Fantasy: Why Orbital Tourism Is Decades of Delays Dressed Up as...
Ask anyone who has watched the commercial space sector develop over the past two decades to name the most anticipated and least-delivered product in the industry's history, and orbital space hotels would be near the top of the list. The idea has appeared in trade publications, investment prospectuses, architectural renderings, and press releases continuously since at least 2001, when Dennis Tito became the first private individual to pay for a trip to the International Space Station and the concept of orbital tourism entered the popular imagination.
Space Industrial Base, Supply Chains, and National Space Capacity
Space capability is often presented through visible milestones such as launches, satellite deployments, or missions to the Moon and Mars. Those outcomes reflect a deeper structure that exists beneath them. That structure consists of industrial capability, workforce depth, supply chain integration, and institutional capacity. Each element contributes to what can be described as a state’s space capacity.
Space-Based Solar Power: Elegant Physics, Impossible Economics
Space-based solar power occupies a peculiar position in the energy and space technology conversation. The concept has been studied, proposed, funded at the study level, and enthusiastically rediscovered every decade or so since aerospace engineer Peter Glaser first described it in a 1968 paper in Science magazine. It is genuinely elegant in conception: place large solar arrays in geostationary orbit where sunlight is available nearly 24 hours a day without atmospheric interference, convert that electricity to microwave or laser radiation, beam it down to a receiving antenna on Earth's surface, and reconvert it to electricity for the grid. The physics are real. The engineering challenges are enormous. The economics, in any scenario grounded in current or near-future technology and costs, don't work.
Dual-Use Dilemmas: The Ethics of Military-Commercial Convergence in the New Space Economy
In the spring of 2022, weeks after Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Maxar Technologies released commercial satellite imagery showing a convoy of Russian military vehicles stretching more than 60 kilometers along a road north of Kyiv. The images were unclassified, commercially licensed, and publicly available. They were also, from a military intelligence standpoint, extraordinarily valuable. Ukrainian forces, NATO planners, and journalists all used those images to understand Russian military positioning and intentions in a way that would have been impossible without commercial Earth observation.
The Satellite Imagery Glut: Too Much Data, Too Few Paying Customers, and a Coming...
The commercial Earth observation industry spent most of the 2010s arguing, convincingly, that the world needed more satellite imagery. Government monopolies on high-resolution space imagery had kept prices high, revisit rates low, and access restricted to well-funded defense and intelligence agencies. The new commercial operators, starting with DigitalGlobe and later expanding to include dozens of smaller startups enabled by falling satellite manufacturing costs, promised to democratize remote sensing: daily imagery of anywhere on Earth, affordable enough for agriculture companies, supply chain analysts, insurance firms, and academic researchers.
The European Commission’s 2026 Proposal to Recast EUSPA as the European Union Space Services...
On 7 April 2026, the European Commission published a proposal for a regulation on the future European Union Space Services Agency, a body that would replace the current European Union Agency for the Space Programme as the agency’s formal legal identity while carrying forward its existing institutional core. The document is not a proposal to build a new satellite system, nor is it a plan to dismantle the present agency. It is a proposal to rewrite the agency’s legal foundation so that the institution can continue operating after the current 2021 to 2027 EU Space Programme Regulationreaches the end of its budget cycle.
How Space-Enabled Military Systems Are Vulnerable to Asymmetric Warfare
On 24 February 2022, as Russian forces began their full-scale invasion of Ukraine, a cyberattack struck Viasat ’s KA-SAT network and disabled large numbers of modems. The effect reached beyond military users in Ukraine and spilled into other European states. For anyone studying how asymmetric pressure works against space-enabled systems, that incident was a warning written in real time. The target was not a satellite blown apart in orbit. The opening damage came through the network around the satellite, hitting terminals and service continuity rather than the spacecraft itself.
LEO Commercialization Market Studies Published by NASA Through April 2026
NASA has published a small but meaningful body of market-related studies that sit between policy, procurement, industrial strategy, and commercial forecasting. Some were written inside NASA. Others were produced by consulting firms, aerospace contractors, and industry analysts under NASA sponsorship and then released through NASA websites or the NASA Technical Reports Server.
Space Economy Market Intelligence: The Complete Report Catalogue from BryceTech, Novaspace, and Analysys Mason
The global space economy is now measured in the hundreds of billions of dollars by most credible sources, with Novaspace estimating it at $626.4 billion in 2025 and forecasting growth to $1.01 trillion by 2034. BryceTech's data for the Satellite Industry Association puts the satellite sector alone at $293 billion in 2024, accounting for 71 percent of a $415 billion global space economy. These headline numbers get quoted constantly in investment decks, policy briefings, and press releases. What gets cited far less often is where those numbers actually come from.
Directory of Organizations That Provide Space Economy Market Intelligence Reports
The list below is a broad, current directory of the main organizations that publish, sell, or maintain space-economy-related market intelligence reports, outlooks, data products, or recurring industry analyses as of April 2026.
Starlink and the Monopoly Trap: Is Commercial Broadband from Space Already a Closed Market?
When SpaceX began deploying the first Starlink satellites in May 2019, the conventional wisdom in the satellite communications industry was that a large low Earth orbit broadband constellation was technically feasible but economically treacherous. History seemed to support that view. Teledesic, backed by Bill Gates and Craig McCaw, spent the 1990s developing a 900-satellite broadband constellation and quietly folded after years of delays and cost overruns. Iridium entered bankruptcy in 1999. Globalstar followed suit in 2002. The graveyard of satellite broadband ambitions stretching back three decades formed an implicit warning.
The Next Decade in Space: Global Exploration Missions From 2026 to 2036
Space exploration has entered one of its most active periods in more than half a century. Between 2026 and 2036, dozens of planned missions will send spacecraft to the Moon, Mars, Venus, Mercury, several asteroids, Jupiter's moons, Saturn's largest moon, and beyond. Governments, space agencies, and private companies across the United States, Europe, China, Japan, India, and elsewhere are committing billions of dollars and years of engineering effort to missions that will collectively reshape human understanding of the solar system. Some of these missions are already underway, launched years ago and still traveling toward their destinations. Others are in final assembly or undergoing testing. A few remain on the drawing board, subject to budget decisions and technical milestones that can still shift timelines.
Highly Rated Books About NASA
A scan across Amazon availability, long-running reader reception on Goodreads, and the historical record of NASAproduces a fairly clear pattern. The books that stay near the top are not random tie-ins or quick commemorative titles. They are usually first-person memoirs from astronauts, narrative histories built from interviews, or biographies tied to turning points such as Apollo 8, Apollo 11, and Apollo 13. The enduring center of gravity is still the Apollo program, which says something about how the public continues to understand the agency.
NASA’s Space Reactor-1 Freedom: America’s First Nuclear-Powered Mission to Mars
When NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman took to the stage at the agency's Ignition event on March 24, 2026, one announcement cut through everything else. The United States would fly a nuclear-powered spacecraft to Mars before the end of 2028. The project is called Space Reactor-1 Freedom, or SR-1 Freedom, and it represents the first time a fission reactor will be used to propel a vehicle beyond Earth's sphere of influence.















