HR-1154-119
Referred to the House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology.
Sponsored by Ken Calvert (R-CA)
What it does
This bill would direct the Secretary of Homeland Security to formally designate space systems, services, and technology as a critical infrastructure sector within 30 days of enactment. Within 180 days, the Secretary would be required to issue guidance defining the scope of the sector — including satellites, launch infrastructure, terrestrial support systems, and related information technology — and to designate a Sector-Specific Agency to oversee it. The Secretary would also be required to submit a report to Congress within 90 days of issuing that guidance on its implementation.
Who benefits
Commercial space companies (e.g., launch providers, satellite operators) that would gain access to DHS threat intelligence and security coordination resources. The U.S. military and intelligence community, which rely heavily on commercial space infrastructure. Telecommunications and GPS users broadly, since satellite systems underpin those services. Cybersecurity firms that specialize in critical infrastructure protection and would likely see expanded contracting opportunities. The Space Information Sharing and Analysis Center (Space ISAC), which would gain a formal role in the new sector framework.
Who is hurt
Commercial space companies that may face new compliance burdens, reporting requirements, or regulatory oversight associated with critical infrastructure status. Smaller space startups with fewer resources to absorb potential regulatory costs. Foreign-owned or foreign-partnered space ventures that may face heightened scrutiny. Existing critical infrastructure sectors that may see DHS attention and resources redistributed toward the new space sector.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that U.S. space infrastructure — including GPS, satellite communications, and launch systems — underpins nearly every other critical infrastructure sector, from financial networks to military operations, yet currently lacks the formal federal security coordination framework that sectors like energy and finance enjoy. They contend that adversaries such as China and Russia have demonstrated the ability and intent to target space assets, as evidenced by Russia's cyberattack on the Viasat satellite network at the outset of its 2022 invasion of Ukraine, making formal designation and coordinated federal protection long overdue.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that adding a new critical infrastructure sector through legislation, rather than through the established Presidential Policy Directive process, risks creating a bureaucratic framework that imposes compliance costs on a fast-moving commercial space industry without demonstrably improving security outcomes. They contend that DHS already has authority to coordinate with space industry stakeholders informally, and that mandating rigid sector structures within tight statutory deadlines — 30 and 180 days — may produce rushed, poorly tailored guidance that burdens innovative companies before the scope of the sector is well understood.