S-1898-119
Placed on Senate Legislative Calendar under General Orders. Calendar No. 440.
Sponsored by John Hickenlooper (D-CO)
What it does
The ORBITS Act of 2025 would establish a NASA-led competitive grant program to fund research, development, and demonstration of technologies that actively remove or reposition defunct satellites and other human-made debris from Earth's orbit. It would also direct the National Space Council to update federal orbital debris mitigation standards within one year, covering collision risk, post-mission disposal, and spacecraft tracking requirements. The bill authorizes up to $150 million for fiscal years 2026–2030 and requires the Department of Commerce to publish a 10-year demand assessment for debris remediation services.
Who benefits
Commercial satellite operators (including broadband constellation companies like SpaceX Starlink and Amazon Kuiper) whose assets face collision risk from debris. NASA and the Department of Defense, which operate high-value government satellites. Aerospace and space technology startups that would compete for demonstration contracts. Universities and nonprofit research organizations eligible for awards. Future space mission operators, including those planning crewed missions. Downstream consumers of satellite-dependent services (GPS, weather forecasting, broadband internet, financial transactions). International spacefaring nations that would benefit from U.S.-led debris reduction and shared standards.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers who bear the $150 million authorization cost. Incumbent aerospace contractors who may face new competition from startups under the competitive award structure. Foreign space operators whose debris is listed but who may resist U.S.-led remediation or standards as an assertion of jurisdiction. Operators of older satellites that may face stricter post-mission disposal requirements under updated standards. Agencies whose existing debris-related programs could be restructured or duplicated, potentially diverting resources.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that low-Earth orbit is approaching a tipping point: NASA estimates more than 27,000 pieces of trackable debris currently orbit Earth, and the European Space Agency warns that cascading collisions — the "Kessler Syndrome" — could render entire orbital shells unusable. They contend the bill's competitive, milestone-based structure leverages private sector innovation while limiting government cost exposure, mirroring the successful Commercial Crew and Commercial Cargo models that reduced NASA launch costs by an estimated 10-fold. Establishing uniform U.S. standards, they argue, also positions America to lead international norm-setting before other spacefaring nations fill that vacuum.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that $150 million is insufficient to meaningfully address a debris field requiring removal of thousands of objects, risking the creation of an underfunded program that produces demonstration missions without scalable commercial follow-through. They contend that updated debris mitigation standards — particularly post-mission disposal timelines — could impose significant compliance costs on U.S. commercial satellite operators, disadvantaging them relative to foreign competitors not subject to the same rules. Critics also note that the bill's international jurisdiction provisions raise unresolved questions about whether the U.S. has legal authority under the Outer Space Treaty to remediate debris registered to other nations without their explicit consent.