Business Standard

The Japanese entrepreneur who wants to collect space trash

Okada's Space Sweepers hopes to profit by cleaning up Earth's lower orbit

Keplar Spacecraft moving through space  PTI

Keplar Spacecraft moving through space <b> PTI <b>

Martin Fackler
Sitting in a drab industrial neighbourhood surrounded by warehouses and factories, Astroscale’s Tokyo office seems appropriately located for a company seeking to enter the waste management business.

Only inside do visitors see signs that its founder, Mitsunobu Okada, aspires to be more than an ordinary garbage man. Schoolroom pictures of the planets decorate the door to the meeting room. Satellite mock-ups occupy a corner. Okada greets guests in a dark blue T-shirt emblazoned with his company’s slogan: Space Sweepers.

Okada is an entrepreneur with a vision of creating the first trash collection company dedicated to cleaning up some of humanity’s hardest-to-reach rubbish: the spent rocket stages, inert satellites and other debris that have been collecting above Earth since Sputnik ushered in the space age. He launched Astroscale three years ago in the belief that national space agencies were dragging their feet in facing the problem, which could be tackled more quickly by a small private company motivated by profit.
 
“Let’s face it, waste management isn’t sexy enough for a space agency to convince taxpayers to allocate money,” said Okada, 43, who put Astroscale’s headquarters in start-up-friendly Singapore but is building its spacecraft in his native Japan, where he found more engineers. “My breakthrough is figuring out how to make this into a business.” management that was responsible for 

Over the last half-century, low Earth orbit has become so littered with debris that space agencies and scientists warn of the increasing danger of collisions for satellites and manned spacecraft. The United States Air Force now keeps track of about 23,000 pieces of space junk that are big enough — about four inches or larger — to be detected from the ground.
Scientists say there could be tens of millions of smaller particles, such as bolts or chunks of frozen engine coolant, that cannot be discerned from Earth. Even the tiniest pieces move through orbit at speeds fast enough to turn them into potentially deadly projectiles. In 1983, the space shuttle Challenger returned to Earth with a pea-size pit in its windshield from a paint-chip strike.

“If we don’t start removing these things, the debris environment will become unstable,” said William Ailor, a fellow at the Aerospace Corporation, a federally funded research and development centre in California.

Enter Okada, a former government official and internet entrepreneur. He said he has created a two-step plan for making money from debris removal. First, Astroscale plans to launch a 50-pound satellite called IDEA OSG 1 next year aboard a Russian rocket. It will carry panels that can measure the number of strikes from debris of even less than a millimetre. The more ambitious step will come in 2018, when he says Astroscale will launch a craft called the ELSA 1. It will be loaded with sensors and manoeuvring thrusters to allow it to track and intercept a piece of debris.

Don't miss the most important news and views of the day. Get them on our Telegram channel

First Published: Nov 29 2016 | 10:34 PM IST

Explore News