The OECD Space Forum is investigating the economics of space sustainability and seeks to encourage leading-edge academic research in this new domain. The OECD and 11 space agencies are offering researchers and students the opportunity to join an international project. PhD, post-doc and Master’s students as well as academic staff from universities and research organisations from around the world are invited to tackle the same research questions and join an international community of practitioners.
Project Details
While our societies rely ever-more on space applications for telecommunications, resource management, meteorology and climate monitoring, Earth’s orbits are getting more congested with thousands of satellites with growing risks linked to heavy space traffic and increasing space debris density.
At the initiative of several OECD Space Forum members, the OECD Secretariat launched in 2021 an original international project on the economics of space sustainability. The objective is to promote academic research that is thought-provoking and to ultimately provide new evidence to the global community, which will help guide future decisions on how to best leverage the benefits of the space environment for present and future generations.
Researchers in universities and research organisations from around the world have been invited to join and tackle the same research questions focusing on how to measure the costs of space debris and/or the value of space infrastructure, and then produce original research papers. After a selection of the best papers, the first key findings were published in Earth’s Orbits at Risk: The Economics of Space Sustainability (2022).
The second phase of the project added a third research question focused on the possible economic effects of policy options for addressing space debris. The results will be published in the forthcoming report The Economics of Space Sustainability: Exploring Policy Options for Space Debris Management (2024). This original international project on the economics of space sustainability should see a third phase in 2024-25. In the meantime, a workshop is organised at OECD in December 2023 to present the preliminary findings from the overall project so far.
Save the date
Selected findings from the project will be presented at the OECD Space Forum Workshop – The Economics of Space Sustainability: Identifying Policy Options and Assessing their Effects, taking place on 14 December 2023 at the OECD Headquarters in Paris, 09.30-17.00 CET.
The workshop will convene experts and practitioners from governments, academia and the private sector to discuss ways forward for government action. The discussions will notably focus on the economic effects of policy options, the optimal design of policy and further evidence needs, to provide concrete support for decision makers and build a future research agenda.
Session 1 presents new evidence on the cost of space debris and the value of space infrastructure. In recent years, the sustainable use of the space environment has received more attention from academia as well as industry and government stakeholders. Still, there is insufficient knowledge and awareness about the magnitude of the problem and how it can be translated into a language understandable to decision makers. The session is introduced by a keynote on the current and potential future state of the orbital environment, followed by selected findings from the OECD Project on the Economics of Space Sustainability, run jointly with NASA-funded research on the socio-economic cost of space debris.
Session 2 assesses the effects of policy options for space debris mitigation. Building on the discussions in Session 1, there is no longer a question of “if” further government action is necessary to mitigate space debris, but rather “how” it can be implemented to reach the desired environmental objectives while not curbing growth and innovation in the sector.
The session is introduced by a keynote on the observed impacts of environmental regulatory stringency on competitivity and innovation in the broader economy, followed by findings from the OECD Project on the Economics of Space Debris and NASA-funded research on the effects of different types of policy options to mitigate space debris.
The workshop ends with an expert panel discussion between operators and government agencies. Key questions to be addressed:
> To register for this workshop, please click here.
> Agenda
9h30-10h00 CET | Welcome coffee |
10.00 CET | Welcoming remarks by Claire Jolly (Head, OECD Space Forum, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation) |
10.10 CET | Introduction to the OECD project on the Economics of Space Sustainability (Marit Undseth, Policy Analyst, OECD Space Forum, Directorate for Science, Technology and Innovation) |
10.40-12.30 CET | Session 1:New evidence on the cost of space debris and the value of space infrastructure
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12.30-14.00 CET | Lunch break |
14.00-17.00 CET | Session 2:Assessing the effects of policy options for space debris mitigation
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15.30-15.45 CET | Networking break |
15.45-16.50 CET |
Panel discussion: Industry and government perspectives on policies and regulations to improve space sustainability Panel participants:
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16.50-17:00 CET | Closing remarks and next steps |
Further Reading
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