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Sovereign Earth Observation Systems and Unilateral Commercial Imagery Censorship
On March 7, 2025, Reuters reported that Ukraine’s access to Maxar imagery through the U.S. government’s Global Enhanced GEOINT Delivery program had been temporarily disabled. That episode gave governments a concrete example of how sovereign earth observation systems can become more attractive when access to commercial imagery depends on another country’s policy decisions, contract rights, data portals, or security rules. The issue was not that commercial providers had become unreliable in ordinary market terms. The issue was that the strongest imagery networks often sit inside national security relationships that can alter access for foreign users during political stress.
Censorship and Commercial Earth Observation
Censorship and commercial Earth observation now sit inside the same market because satellites no longer serve only governments, weather agencies, and scientific programs. Companies sell imagery, tasking, monitoring, analytics, alerts, and archive access to customers that include insurers, newsrooms, humanitarian groups, commodity traders, defense agencies, infrastructure firms, and national intelligence organizations. A user may buy a fresh optical image, access a radar scene collected through clouds, monitor a port, inspect crop stress, or compare construction activity over time.
Measuring AI in the U.S. Economy
This article is based on three U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis working papers that examine artificial intelligence (AI) through the structure of national economic accounts, industry production accounts, cost data, and price measurement. The first is Concepts and Challenges of Measuring Production of Artificial Intelligence in the U.S. Economy, published in January 2025 by Tina Highfill, David Wasshausen, and Gregory Prunchak. It explains how AI production and AI use enter gross domestic product (GDP) through existing accounting categories such as software, research and development, semiconductors, data services, and intermediate inputs.
Space Industry Economic Centers in Europe
Europe’s upstream space industry employed nearly 66,000 full-time workers in 2024 and generated €8.8 billion in final sales, according to the ASD-Eurospace 2025 facts and figures statistical series. That figure describes the industrial base that designs, builds, tests, and integrates satellites, launch systems, payloads, and related ground equipment. It does not capture the full downstream economy of satellite services, navigation, connectivity, imagery, data analytics, insurance, software, and defense users, so the wider economic footprint of space industry economic centers in Europe is larger than the manufacturing base alone.
SpaceX Starship’s 12th Flight Test Targeted for May 20, 2026: Launch Window Opens at...
SpaceX is preparing for Starship’s twelfth integrated flight test (IFT-12), the next major milestone in its ambitious push toward fully reusable orbital launch capabilities. As of Monday, May 18, the company has updated the target launch date to Wednesday, May 20, 2026, with the launch window opening at 5:30 p.m. CDT (22:30 UTC) from the new Pad 2 at Starbase in Boca Chica, Texas. The two-hour window extends until approximately 7:00 p.m. CDT (00:00 UTC on May 21).
European IVA Spacesuit Prototype Delivered to the International Space Station
The European Space Agency (ESA) is advancing human spaceflight capabilities through collaborative efforts focused on crewed operations aboard the International Space Station (ISS). A notable development in this area is the recent arrival of a French-developed intra-vehicular activity (IVA) spacesuit prototype at the orbiting laboratory. This prototype forms part of a CNES-led initiative aligned with ESA’s human exploration objectives, marking progress toward enhanced European self-reliance in essential life-support technologies for future missions.
What Military Space Systems Would Canada Need for True Sovereign Defence Capability?
On April 21, 2026, the federal government introduced the Canadian Space Launch Act, and that timing matters because Canada still sends its satellites abroad for launch and still depends on foreign sovereign systems for several military functions. That means the sovereignty question cannot be answered by naming one flagship program or by counting how many Canadian firms can build a bus, a payload, or a terminal. Sovereignty in military space is a system property.
The Space Economy Workforce and the Jobs Behind the New Space Economy
The BEA working paper The Space Economy Workforce and STEM Occupations, published in September 2025, reports that the U.S. space economy employed more than 373,000 private-sector workers in 2023 and that space-related work reached across software, telecommunications, advanced manufacturing, research, wholesale distribution, education, government services, professional services, construction, and technical operations. That finding matters because it pushes the discussion beyond the familiar image of a workforce dominated by astronauts, physicists, and aerospace engineers.
Directory of Hyperspectral Satellite Operators
This directory of hyperspectral satellite operators includes commercial companies, public science missions, hosted instruments, greenhouse gas specialists, and planned systems that use many narrow spectral bands to measure Earth’s surface or atmosphere. Hyperspectral imaging differs from ordinary optical imaging because it records detailed spectral information, allowing analysts to compare how crops, rocks, water, gases, soils, and man-made materials reflect or absorb light at specific wavelengths.
Satellite Services Used by Canada’s Department of National Defence
On December 9, 2025, Ottawa announced a strategic partnership for the Enhanced Satellite Communications Project – Polar, a sign that Canada national defence satellite services are moving toward firmer Arctic coverage after years of depending on a mixed patchwork of Canadian sensors, allied systems, and commercial bandwidth. The Royal Canadian Air Force describes the Canadian Armed Forces space effort in four service families: satellite communications, surveillance from space, surveillance of space, and positioning, navigation and timing. That four-part structure is the most useful way to understand what Canada actually uses for defence.
How Accurate Are FAA Commercial Launch Forecasts?
Forecasting commercial space launch activity has become more difficult, not easier, as the industry has matured. In the 1990s and 2000s, the main forecasting problem was over-optimism: too many expected commercial launches failed to materialize. By the early 2020s, the problem changed. The rapid increase in SpaceX launch cadence, growth in satellite constellation deployment, reusable launch operations, commercial reentry activity, suborbital human spaceflight, and new licensing demands caused several forecasts to fall behind actual activity.
How Canada Uses Satellite Services for Arctic National Security
Canada’s Arctic covers roughly 40% of the country’s landmass and more than 70% of its coastline, creating a national security problem defined by distance, weather, darkness, sparse infrastructure, and limited year-round access. Satellite services help Canada watch, communicate, navigate, and operate across this region without needing a dense network of roads, airfields, ports, radar stations, and communications towers in every location. In the North, space systems do work that ground infrastructure alone cannot perform at national scale.
3 Canadian Space Division and Canada’s Military Space Enterprise
On July 22, 2022, the Royal Canadian Air Force stood up 3 Canadian Space Division in Ottawa and reorganized Canada’s military space function into a named divisional formation under the air force. That move marked a shift from a smaller institutional arrangement toward a standing operational organization with a command team, subordinate units, named mission areas, and a defined place inside the Department of National Defence and the Canadian Armed Forces.
Countermeasures for a Laser-Linked Space Economy
NASA’s TeraByte InfraRed Delivery mission demonstrated 200 gigabit-per-second laser downlinks from a 6U CubeSat-class spacecraft, showing why satellite free-space optical communications countermeasures now matter for commercial, civil, and defense networks. A small spacecraft can transmit large data volumes through a tightly pointed optical beam rather than a broad radio-frequency footprint. That change alters the communications contest. It reduces the value of broad-area radio interference, yet it raises the value of beam control, terminal protection, weather-aware routing, and ground network design.
Space Industry Major Economic Centers in the United States
The latest published U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis space economy statistics show that the U.S. space economy accounted for $142.5 billion of gross domestic product in 2023, which makes space industry major economic centers in the United States more than a collection of famous launch pads. The sector includes launch operations, satellite manufacturing, human spaceflight, national security programs, software, communications, Earth observation, research, procurement, training, insurance, finance, regulation, and ground infrastructure. A region becomes a space center when these functions cluster around skilled labor, public spending, private capital, specialized facilities, and a supply base that can support difficult hardware and data-service work.















