viernes, 29 de mayo de 2026
EDITORIAL: ¿JAPON DEBATE ARTICULO 9? Por IA Gémini de Google & Hans Alejandro Gamboa Rengifo de los Brigadistas Jurídicos de Colombia Latinoamérica
UK-JAPAN RENKEI Early Career Researcher Collaboration Lab
In recent years, “space” has gained renewed importance as a frontier of human activity, extending beyond outer space to include ocean space and cyberspace. Advances in satellite and rocket technology have made outer space essential for areas such as communications, navigation, and disaster monitoring, while also creating challenges including orbital congestion, safety, and liability. Similarly, developments in marine science and technology have opened access to deep-sea resources, raising urgent questions about environmental protection and ocean governance. Cyberspace, a defining domain of the twenty-first century, offers vast opportunities but also prompts global debate over how it should be governed across borders.
Against this backdrop, the RENKEI Collaboration Lab 2026 will explore the opportunities and responsibilities associated with these three “spaces”. Through a series of workshops, participants will examine current developments and consider the future direction of these domains in the century ahead.
Workshop 1: Marine Studies
“How do we see the Ocean space through different lenses?”
Session overview: The purpose of this session is to better understand where the perceptions of ocean space converge or diverge among biologists, ecologists, coastal/ocean modelers, and other research communities. The ocean is a dynamic and largely unexplored environment that is highly interconnected to many systems. This session brings together biologists, ecologists, ocean and coastal modelers, and other research communities to explore how different disciplines perceive and conceptualize ocean space. How can we integrate these diverse perspectives into a unified understanding of the ocean? Through shared discussions, we aim to uncover where these perceptions between various researchers converge or diverge and how to obtain a comprehensive insight of the changing ocean.
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Workshop 2: International Law
“Human Utilization of New Spaces – Beyond the Boundaries of National Jurisdiction”
This session examines the legal evolution and structural limitations of governing realms beyond national sovereignty: outer space, areas beyond national jurisdiction in the oceans (the high seas and the deep seabed), and cyberspace. While often termed “global commons,” these domains operate under diverse norms—from traditional freedoms and the common heritage principle to emerging rules on digital sovereignty—challenging unified regulation. The inquiry focuses on inherent constraints of rules reflected in instruments like the UN treaties on outer space, the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), and the UN Group of Governmental Experts (GGE) and Open-ended Working Group (OEWG) on cyberspace. It addresses the regulation of state and non-state actors, evaluating challenges like attributing legal responsibility and ensuring compliance where boundaries are blurred. The session aims to clarify structural gaps and balance state interests with the collective preservation of these vital spaces.
Workshop 3: Aerospace
“Sustainable and Scalable Space Development and Utilization”
Session overview: The goal of this session is to define a cross-disciplinary roadmap for advancing sustainable space activities through next-generation technologies, including On-Orbit Servicing (OOS). As global space activities expand through public–private partnerships, orbital environments are becoming increasingly congested and complex. Achieving long-term sustainability while advancing the space economy requires transformative innovation. OOS technologies have been attracting increasing global attention in recent years as a key enabler of safe, efficient, and scalable space operations. The session highlights the technical advancement of compact, high-performance servicing platforms with advanced autonomy and mobility, focusing on key spacecraft technologies such as satellite systems, space robotics, propulsion, space communications. These systems enable refuelling, repair, replacement, assembly, and in-space manufacturing—unlocking new operational models in Earth orbit and beyond. The session also explores the integration of space life sciences, materials science, and artificial intelligence to expand practical space utilization. Through collaboration among academia, industry, startups, and public institutions, the session presents a vision for accelerating deployment, fostering industrial co-creation, and building a sustainable space ecosystem." link
La luna patrimonio común de la humanidad según tratado del espacio Ultraterrestre de 1967 Constitución del derecho espacial moderno.
La nueva carrera espacial entre Estados Unidos, China y otras potencias ha vuelto a plantear la pregunta de a quién pertenece realmente la Luna. Aunque hay muchos que creen que ninguna nación podría reclamar como suya el satélite terrestre, la legislación espacial internacional es mucho más compleja de lo que parece.
El Tratado del Espacio Exterior
La base legal que regula actualmente la propiedad de la Luna es el Tratado sobre el Espacio Ultraterrestre firmado en 1967 y es considerado como la constitución del derecho espacial moderno. El acuerdo fue impulsado durante la Guerra Fría por Estados Unidos, la Unión Soviética y Reino Unido para evitar tener conflictos territoriales fuera de la Tierra.
Este tratado establece claramente que ningún Estado puede apropiarse de la Luna ni de otros cuerpos celestes, mediante soberanía, ocupación o cualquier otro método. Es decir, ningún país puede declarar oficialmente que la Luna le pertenece.
Esta norma impidió a Estados Unidos reclamar la Luna tras las misiones de Apolo o que la Unión Soviética hiciera lo mismo con sus programas espaciales. Actualmente, más de 110 países forman parte del tratado internacional.
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La Luna es considerada patrimonio común de la humanidad. El problema principal aparece cuando se habla de la explotación económica de los recursos naturales. En 1979 se firmó el llamado Acuerdo de la Luna, que es un tratado que intentó regular la explotación tanto minera como científica del satélite. El documento defendía que los recursos lunares debían beneficiar a toda la humanidad y no solo a unos pocos países o empresas privadas pese a la negatividad de las superpotencias.
Estados Unidos y China
Estados Unidos ha llevado a cabo el programa Artemis junto a la NASA y varios aliados internacionales con el objetivo de poder regresar a la Luna y establecer una presencia permanente en los próximos años.
China, por su parte, se encuentra desarrollando su propio programa lunar con planes para construir una estación científica internacional junto a Rusia. Pekín pretende enviar astronautas a la superficie lunar antes de 2030. link
jueves, 28 de mayo de 2026
Extraterrestrial Legal Systems Industry Analysis Report 2026: Key Trends, Drivers, and Forecast Insights
Projected Growth Trajectory of the Extraterrestrial Legal Systems Market
The extraterrestrial legal systems market is poised for remarkable expansion, reaching an estimated value of $6.2 billion by 2030. This growth reflects a strong compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 20.5%. Several factors contribute to this rise, including the growing demand for property rights and regulations regarding resource allocation on the Moon and Mars. Additionally, as space tourism and private missions increase, there is heightened need for legal frameworks addressing liability and insurance compliance. The complexity of managing cross-border space operations also fuels the demand for specialized commercial contract negotiation. Furthermore, the creation of comprehensive governance structures supports sustained human settlement and industrial activities in extraterrestrial environments. Key trends in this period include the development of space resource property rights frameworks, growth in international space governance alliances, standardization of extraterrestrial contracts, advancement of space dispute resolution mechanisms, and the incorporation of space law into national legal systems.
Leading Firms Driving Innovation in the Extraterrestrial Legal Systems Market
Several prominent organizations are at the forefront of the extraterrestrial legal systems market. These include Morrison & Foerster LLP, Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld LLP, Rasmussen Global, Linton Space Law & Strategy, Milbank LLP, Space Law & Policy Solutions, Wiley Rein LLP, Mayer Brown LLP, Aegis Space Law, PobleteTamargo LLP, Hogan Lovells US LLP, Secure World Foundation, Mararu & Mararu Attorneys at Law, Dentons, Greenberg Traurig LLP, Schroeder Law PLLC, Clyde & Co LLP, Pagliara Law Group, HEUKING Kühn Lüer Wojtek, and Rose Law Group PC. These firms are actively shaping legal practices and frameworks necessary to govern space activities efficiently and fairly.
Key Market Drivers: Focus on Space Sustainability as Security
A major driver in this market is the growing emphasis on space sustainability as a form of security. This concept revolves around preserving the long-term safety and stability of outer space operations to prevent conflicts, protect assets, and guarantee ongoing access to space for all users. Leading companies are developing innovative strategies to influence international policies and regulatory frameworks around this crucial issue, positioning themselves as pivotal players in space governance.
Addressing Challenges in Outer Space Governance
With the rapid expansion of space activities, several pressing challenges have emerged. These include the rising accumulation of orbital debris, increasing militarization of space, and unregulated commercial exploitation of space resources. For example, in June 2025, the Netherlands-based Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam hosted the inaugural conference of the Space Law and Sustainability Center at ASI. This event emphasized the importance of space sustainability as an international security concern. It sought to foster global cooperation and develop regulatory frameworks to ensure the sustainable and secure management of outer space." link
lunes, 25 de mayo de 2026
Acuerdos Artemisa 2026: IV taller celebrado en Perú
El evento, celebrado los días 13 y 14 de mayo y organizado por la Agencia Espacial del Perú (Conida) en colaboración con la NASA y el Departamento de Estado de Estados Unidos, reunió a representantes de 30 países para mantener debates técnicos y ejercicios de simulación centrados en la interoperabilidad, la no interferencia y la liberación de datos científicos en la superficie lunar.
Cifra récord de 67 países firmantes
En las semanas previas al taller, seis naciones se adhirieron a los Acuerdos: Letonia, Jordania, Marruecos, Malta, Irlanda y Paraguay, elevando el número total de signatarios a 67. Entre ellos se encuentra la totalidad de los 23 estados miembros de la Agencia Espacial Europea (ESA), tras la adhesión de Irlanda el 4 de mayo. España suscribió el documento internacional el 30 de mayo de 2025.
Según declaró el administrador de la NASA, Jared Isaacman, "Irlanda se une en un momento crucial. Artemis II fue el acto de apertura del regreso de la humanidad a la Luna. Lo que viene ahora es una campaña sostenida de misiones que nos llevarán de vuelta a la superficie lunar, no solo para plantar banderas y dejar huellas, sino para construir una base y quedarnos".
India, dentro; China y Rusia, fuera
India firmó los Acuerdos Artemisa el 21 de junio de 2023, convirtiéndose en el 27º país signatario. Sin embargo, el gobierno de Nueva Delhi ha precisado que, aunque apoya esos principios, no participa en el programa Artemis liderado por la NASA, ya que mantiene su propia visión de exploración espacial bajo su Visión Espacial 2047, que incluye las misiones Chandrayaan y la construcción de una estación espacial india (Bharatiya Antariksha Station).
En el otro lado del tablero geopolítico, ni China ni Rusia han suscrito los Acuerdos Artemisa. Ambos países lideran la Alianza Internacional de Investigación de la Estación Lunar (ILRS, por sus siglas en inglés), una iniciativa paralela que cuenta con la adhesión de más de 17 países, entre ellos Bielorrusia, Pakistán, Egipto o Sudáfrica, y que aspira a establecer una base tripulada en el polo sur lunar hacia 2035. Esta división refleja lo que diversos analistas describen como el surgimiento de dos modelos contrapuestos para la gobernanza de la exploración espacial: el liderado por Estados Unidos, y el impulsado por China y Rusia.
Objetivos y antecedentes del taller
El objetivo del encuentro en Lima fue revisar las misiones de aterrizaje y órbita lunar planificadas por los países signatarios. Con más de una docena de misiones de alunizaje previstas en los próximos 18 meses, las discusiones se centraron en evitar interferencias, garantizar la interoperabilidad y gestionar los desechos orbitales.
El director de Conida, mayor general Roberto Melgar Sheen, destacó la importancia de que Perú fuera sede del evento. "La comunidad internacional está reconociendo el papel de los países con capacidades emergentes que están activos en el sector espacial, y esta vez le tocó el turno a Perú", dijo.
El evento no solo sirvió como escaparate diplomático, sino como una rampa de despegue para nuevas iniciativas. El mayor general peruano aprovechó la ocasión para presentar una propuesta pionera del gobierno peruano que estipula la creación de un sistema descentralizado para el intercambio de datos de misiones espaciales, respaldado por la Oficina de Naciones Unidas para Asuntos del Espacio Ultraterrestre (Unoosa).
"Este compromiso tiene que ver con el futuro de la actividad espacial y exigirá una mayor articulación entre la diplomacia, la ciencia y la tecnología", enfatizó Melgar durante su discurso. La propuesta busca estandarizar las bases de datos internacionales sobre misiones lunares, permitiendo un acceso abierto y transparente a la información crítica para futuras exploraciones.
El taller de Lima fue el cuarto de una serie iniciada en 2023. El primero se celebró en Polonia, el segundo en Canadá, y el tercero tuvo lugar los días 21 y 22 de mayo de 2025 en Abu Dabi, Emiratos Árabes Unidos, con la participación de más de 30 países signatarios en ese momento.
Los Acuerdos Artemisa fueron establecidos en 2020 por Estados Unidos junto a otras siete naciones fundadoras, en respuesta al creciente interés en actividades lunares tanto por parte de gobiernos como de empresas privadas. En línea con el Tratado del Espacio Ultraterrestre de 1967, entre sus principios se incluyen la exploración pacífica y transparente, la asistencia mutua, el acceso abierto a datos científicos y la preservación de sitios de valor histórico.
Con la mirada puesta en la construcción de bases permanentes en la Luna, los Acuerdos Artemisa continúan expandiéndose. Pero el horizonte ya no es de cooperación unánime, sino de competencia regulada entre dos sistemas incompatibles. La próxima parada, según fuentes de la NASA, podría ser Australia o Japón en 2027, mientras la ILRS de China celebra su propio encuentro paralelo. La Luna, décadas después, vuelve a ser un campo de batalla diplomático."
jueves, 21 de mayo de 2026
Japón actualiza su legislación ultraterrestre en 2026 por Gémini IA & Hans Alejandro Gamboa Rengifo
El soporte conceptual de la reforma se concentra en instituciones académicas internacionalistas:
- Universidad de Keio: Liderada en la disciplina por la Dra. Setsuko Aoki. Esta casa de estudios aporta la arquitectura dogmática en materia de responsabilidad civil frente a terceros, regímenes de seguros para cohetes reutilizables y el cumplimiento de las directrices de las Naciones Unidas (COPUOS) sobre la mitigación obligatoria de basura orbital.
- Universidad de Tokio (UTokyo): A través del Instituto para Iniciativas Futuras (IFI) y el Centro de Innovación y Recursos Espaciales (CSRI), académicos como Kazuto Suzuki modelan los criterios de gobernanza transatmósferica y la delimitación jurídica entre el derecho aeronáutico y el espacial ante el desarrollo de vuelos hipersónicos. La Institucionalidad Técnica del Cabinet Office y JAXA
La traducción de la doctrina a la norma positiva es realizada por el aparato estatal:
- La Secretaría Nacional de Política Espacial (Oficina del Gabinete): Es el órgano político encargado de redactar los borradores de ley y coordinar la política pública del sector, sirviendo de enlace directo entre las recomendaciones académicas externas, centros de estudio y la agenda parlamentaria.
- Agencia de Exploración Aeroespacial de Japón (JAXA): A través de su Departamento de Investigación y Relaciones Internacionales, los juristas de la agencia someten los proyectos a un control de viabilidad técnica, garantizando que conceptos como las "licencias de retorno" o el testeo de vectores vacíos (dummy payloads) se ajusten a la realidad de la ingeniería aeroespacial actual.
- La Práctica Juridica Independiente & Firmas Globales.
De igual forma análisis predictivos del resultado comercial liderado por firmas como Mori Hamada & Matsumoto y Greenberg Traurig, cuyos departamentos aeroespaciales decodifican la enmienda para el público y estudiando por certidumbre legal las fases de aterrizaje y manufactura aeroespacial. De esta forma el modelo japonés de 2026 demuestra que el "Derecho Ultraterrestre" moderno requiere también de una evolucion legislativa global. La interacción simbiótica entre la rigurosidad doctrinal de las brigadas jurídicas intercontinentales en la extensión de los consultorios jurídicos universitarios o del conocimiento a la población vulnerable; Keio y UTokyo; la validación técnica de JAXA y/o la visión de mercado de la Oficina del Gabinete posiciona a Japón como la jurisdicción de referencia para el derecho espacial comercial en la región de Asia-Pacífico en el desarrollo jurídico que visiona problemas académicos de los distintos centros de estudio globales en leyes Estatales a largo plazo.
Fuentes Consultadas
- Cabinet Office, Government of Japan – Space Policy Secretariat (Directrices de Mayo 2026).
- Mori Hamada & Matsumoto. (2026). "Overview and Implications of Japan’s Proposed Amendments to the Space Activities Act".
- Greenberg Traurig Tokyo. (2026). "Japan Shifts to Next‐Generation Space Transportation Regulation".
- Publicaciones y Simposios del Center for Space Resources Innovation (CSRI), Universidad de Tokio.
sábado, 16 de mayo de 2026
UNIDROIT WORK AND INSTRUMENTS IN THE AREA OF CONTRACT LAW
viernes, 15 de mayo de 2026
l’Italia è diventata la prima Nazione europea a dotarsi di un provvedimento organico sullo Spazio e sulla Space economy
Nel suo intervento, il Presidente del Consiglio ha ribadito come la strategia nazionale sullo spazio sia strutturata e fondata su tre assi direttrici: la governance attraverso il COMINT; la Legge 13 giugno 2025 n. 89, con la quale l’Italia è diventata la prima Nazione europea a dotarsi di un provvedimento organico sullo Spazio e sulla Space economy; la filiera nazionale basata su grandi gruppi, piccole e medie imprese innovative, start-up, università, centri di ricerca, distretti territoriali che esprimono competenze industriali e scientifiche di primissimo livello.
Nel corso della riunione, il Comitato ha approvato il Documento Strategico di Politica Spaziale Nazionale (DSPSN), predisposto dall’Agenzia Spaziale Italiana in coordinamento con COMINT, in attuazione degli Indirizzi del Governo in materia spaziale e aerospaziale. Il DSPSN definisce il quadro strategico nazionale di medio-lungo periodo per il settore, individuando obiettivi, priorità e linee di intervento nei principali ambiti di interesse: sicurezza e resilienza delle infrastrutture spaziali, competitività della filiera industriale, valorizzazione della ricerca, sviluppo delle competenze, rafforzamento dell’autonomia strategica e consolidamento della proiezione internazionale dell’Italia.
La seduta ha inoltre consentito un aggiornamento sul percorso attuativo della Legge 89/2025 in materia di economia dello spazio, nonché sui principali profili finanziari e internazionali connessi alla partecipazione italiana ai programmi europei e al rafforzamento delle cooperazioni bilaterali, con particolare riferimento all’interlocuzione tra Italia e Stati Uniti.
Attenzione è stata infine dedicata alle raccomandazioni emerse dagli Stati Generali della Space Economy che rappresentano il contributo del Parlamento, con l’Intergruppo Parlamentare per la Space Economy, e di sistema industriale, ricerca, finanza e territori alla definizione delle priorità nazionali. Con l’obiettivo di rafforzare la competitività dell’ecosistema italiano e favorire una più ampia partecipazione di imprese, PMI, start-up e centri di competenza." link
jueves, 14 de mayo de 2026
PERU IV Taller de los Acuerdos Artemis por el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y la Agencia Espacial del Perú (CONIDA) con la NASA y el Departamento de Estado de Estados Unidos
Publicación que anuncia la sede del taller
A través de una publicación, la Cancillería del Perú anuncia que la capital del país será la sede del IV Taller de los Acuerdos Artemis, incluso, como parte de esta iniciativa se desarrolló una ceremonia que contó con la presencia de autoridades nacionales e internacionales que brindaron importantes aportes.
La actividad promovida por el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y la Agencia Espacial del Perú (CONIDA), posee el respaldo de la NASA y el Departamento de Estado de Estados Unidos. Además, el taller tiene la finalidad de fortalecer la cooperación internacional y mejorar principios en la exploración espacial en la era del desarrollo tecnológico.
Publicación que anuncia la sede del taller
A través de una publicación, la Cancillería del Perú anuncia que la capital del país será la sede del IV Taller de los Acuerdos Artemis, incluso, como parte de esta iniciativa se desarrolló una ceremonia que contó con la presencia de autoridades nacionales e internacionales que brindaron importantes aportes.
Autoridades que estuvieron a cargo de la ceremonia
Algunas de las figuras que lideraron esta ceremonia fueron el vicecanciller Félix Denegri Boza, el embajador de EEUU en Perú, Bernie Navarro y demás representantes diplomáticos y especialistas del sector aeroespacial.
Incluso, durante la intervención, el vicecanciller resaltó los Acuerdos Artemis como una herramienta clave para impulsar la transparencia, la interoperabilidad y la asistencia mutua entre las naciones involucradas con el Tratado del Espacio Ultraterrestre de 1967 y los lineamientos establecidos por la Comisión acerca la Utilización del Espacio Ultraterrestre con Fines Pacificos de las Naciones Unidas.
Herramientas tecnológicas que impactan positivamente
El vicecanciller también señaló que el interés del Perú en el espacio no se limita únicamente a la investigación científica, explicando que la tecnología espacial tiene aplicaciones concretas en sectores importantes.
Además, recordó que la política espacial peruana tomó un importante impulso desde el lanzamiento del satélite PerúSAT-1 en 2016, siendo uno de los principales avances tecnológicos en el país.
En conclusión, la configuración anunciada en esta ceremonia, permite fortalecer la relación entre Estados Unidos y Perú en materia espacial por medio de la inauguración del taller que colabora con la ciencia, tecnología y diplomacia."
sábado, 9 de mayo de 2026
भारत वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष मानक शक्ति के रूप में उभर रहा है
वैश्विक आईएसओ अंतरिक्ष मानक शिखर सम्मेलन: बीआईएस ने अंतरराष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष शासन में भारत के उत्थान को बढ़ावा दिया
सुश्री खरे के अनुसार, यह सुनिश्चित करने के लिए कि बाह्य अंतरिक्ष गतिविधियां सुरक्षित, टिकाऊ और समावेशी बनी रहें, वैश्विक स्तर पर सामंजस्यपूर्ण मानक आवश्यक हैं।
देवडिस्कोर्स न्यूज़ डेस्क | नई दिल्ली | भारत

छवि साभार: X(@PIB_India)
वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र में भारत के बढ़ते प्रभाव की एक महत्वपूर्ण मान्यता के रूप में, भारतीय मानक ब्यूरो (बीआईएस) ने नई दिल्ली में आईएसओ टीसी 20 / एससी 14 'अंतरिक्ष प्रणाली और संचालन' की 35वीं पूर्ण बैठक और कार्य समूह की बैठकों की मेजबानी की , जिसमें वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष मानकों के भविष्य को आकार देने के लिए अग्रणी अंतरराष्ट्रीय विशेषज्ञों, अंतरिक्ष एजेंसियों, नीति निर्माताओं और उद्योग प्रतिनिधियों को एक साथ लाया गया।
भारत मंडपम में आयोजित उच्च स्तरीय बैठकें भारत के लिए एक महत्वपूर्ण मील का पत्थर हैं, क्योंकि यह न केवल एक प्रमुख अंतरिक्ष यात्री राष्ट्र के रूप में बल्कि अंतरराष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष शासन, मानकीकरण और स्थिरता ढांचे में एक उभरते नेता के रूप में अपनी भूमिका को मजबूत करता है।
इस आयोजन में 13 देशों का प्रतिनिधित्व करने वाले 131 अंतरराष्ट्रीय प्रतिनिधियों ने भाग लिया , जिनमें राष्ट्रीय मानक निकायों, वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष एजेंसियों, आईएसआरओ, उद्योग जगत के नेताओं और शैक्षणिक संस्थानों के अधिकारी शामिल थे।
भारत वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष मानक शक्ति के रूप में उभर रहा है
उद्घाटन सत्र को संबोधित करते हुए, भारत सरकार के उपभोक्ता मामलों के विभाग की सचिव, सुश्री निधि खरे ने कहा कि प्रतिष्ठित आईएसओ अंतरिक्ष मानक सम्मेलन की भारत द्वारा मेजबानी वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष परिवर्तन में देश की तेजी से बढ़ती भूमिका को दर्शाती है।
उन्होंने कहा, "भारत के लिए इस बैठक की मेजबानी करना अत्यंत गौरव की बात है क्योंकि हम वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष परिवर्तन में अग्रणी भूमिका निभा रहे हैं।"
उन्होंने इस बात पर प्रकाश डाला कि भारत सरकार द्वारा शुरू किए गए नीतिगत सुधारों, विशेष रूप से आईएन-स्पेस (भारतीय राष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष संवर्धन और प्राधिकरण केंद्र) की स्थापना के माध्यम से , एक मजबूत पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र का निर्माण हुआ है जो स्टार्टअप, निजी उद्योगों और अनुसंधान संस्थानों को देश की अंतरिक्ष अर्थव्यवस्था में सक्रिय रूप से भाग लेने में सक्षम बनाता है।
सुश्री खरे के अनुसार, यह सुनिश्चित करने के लिए कि बाह्य अंतरिक्ष गतिविधियां सुरक्षित, टिकाऊ और समावेशी बनी रहें, वैश्विक स्तर पर सामंजस्यपूर्ण मानक आवश्यक हैं।
उन्होंने आगे कहा, "इस तरह के वैश्विक सहयोग और विशेषज्ञता के माध्यम से विकसित मानक अंतरिक्ष को मानवता के लिए सुरक्षित, टिकाऊ और समावेशी बनाने में मदद करेंगे।"
बीआईएस भारतीय मानकों को वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष ढांचों के साथ संरेखित कर रहा है
भारतीय मानक ब्यूरो के महानिदेशक श्री संजय गर्ग ने इस बात पर जोर दिया कि भारत के तेजी से विकसित हो रहे अंतरिक्ष क्षेत्र में गुणवत्ता, सुरक्षा और प्रतिस्पर्धा सुनिश्चित करने में मानकीकरण एक महत्वपूर्ण स्तंभ बन गया है।
उन्होंने बताया कि बीआईएस उन्नत अंतरिक्ष प्रौद्योगिकियों में सार्वजनिक और निजी दोनों क्षेत्रों के विकास का समर्थन करने के लिए भारतीय मानकों को अंतरराष्ट्रीय ढांचों के अनुरूप बनाने के लिए सक्रिय रूप से काम कर रहा है।
श्री गर्ग ने कहा, "बीआईएस मानक निजी क्षेत्र को वैश्विक स्तर पर प्रतिस्पर्धी बनने में मदद कर रहे हैं।"
उन्होंने आगे कहा कि भारत में आईएसओ बैठक की मेजबानी करने से भारतीय विशेषज्ञों को अंतरराष्ट्रीय मानकीकरण प्रक्रियाओं में सीधे भाग लेने का एक मूल्यवान अवसर मिलता है, जिससे भारत के घरेलू पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र को मजबूती मिलती है और साथ ही वैश्विक मानक-निर्धारण प्रयासों में योगदान मिलता है।
विशेषज्ञों का कहना है कि भारत द्वारा वाणिज्यिक प्रक्षेपण सेवाओं, उपग्रह निर्माण, गहरे अंतरिक्ष मिशनों, पृथ्वी अवलोकन प्रणालियों और अंतरिक्ष-आधारित अनुप्रयोगों में विस्तार करने के साथ-साथ इस तरह की भागीदारी तेजी से महत्वपूर्ण होती जा रही है।
सुधारों के बाद भारत के निजी अंतरिक्ष क्षेत्र को गति मिली है।
इन-स्पेस के अध्यक्ष डॉ. पवन गोयनका ने पिछले कुछ वर्षों में शुरू किए गए प्रमुख नीतिगत उदारीकरण उपायों के बाद भारत के अंतरिक्ष पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र के परिवर्तनकारी विस्तार पर प्रकाश डाला।
उन्होंने कहा कि निजी क्षेत्र की भागीदारी ने पूरे उद्योग में नवाचार, निवेश और तकनीकी प्रगति को गति दी है।
डॉ. गोयनका ने कहा, "नवाचार को सक्षम बनाने, उद्योग के विश्वास को बढ़ावा देने और वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष अर्थव्यवस्था में भारत के एकीकरण को सुगम बनाने के लिए मजबूत मानक आवश्यक हैं।"
भारत सरकार द्वारा अंतरिक्ष क्षेत्र को निजी कंपनियों, स्टार्टअप्स और विदेशी निवेश की भागीदारी के लिए खोलने के बाद से इस क्षेत्र में महत्वपूर्ण पुनर्गठन हुआ है।
इन सुधारों के परिणामस्वरूप अंतरिक्ष प्रौद्योगिकी के क्षेत्र में काम करने वाला एक जीवंत पारिस्थितिकी तंत्र उभरा है, जो निम्नलिखित क्षेत्रों में कार्यरत है:
उपग्रह प्रक्षेपण प्रणालियाँ
छोटे उपग्रहों का निर्माण
अंतरिक्ष आधारित संचार
पृथ्वी अवलोकन
अंतरिक्ष विश्लेषण
अंतरिक्ष गतिशीलता प्रौद्योगिकियां
डीप-टेक एयरोस्पेस नवाचार
उद्योग जगत के अनुमानों से पता चलता है कि निजी भागीदारी बढ़ने और वैश्विक वाणिज्यिक अवसरों के विस्तार के साथ अगले दशक में भारत की अंतरिक्ष अर्थव्यवस्था में काफी वृद्धि हो सकती है।
अंतरिक्ष स्थिरता और मलबे के शमन पर वैश्विक ध्यान
आईएसओ टीसी 20 / एससी 14 बैठकों का एक प्रमुख फोकस क्षेत्र अंतरिक्ष प्रणालियों के संपूर्ण जीवनचक्र को नियंत्रित करने वाले अंतरराष्ट्रीय मानकों का विकास है - डिजाइन और निर्माण से लेकर प्रक्षेपण, मिशन संचालन और अंतरिक्ष-आधारित सेवाओं तक।
यह उपसमिति निम्नलिखित से संबंधित मानकों को निर्धारित करने में महत्वपूर्ण भूमिका निभाती है:
अंतरिक्ष सुरक्षा
इंटरोऑपरेबिलिटी
मिशन संचालन
उपग्रह विश्वसनीयता
कक्षीय स्थिरता
अंतरिक्ष मलबे को कम करना
दीर्घकालिक अंतरिक्ष शासन
विशेषज्ञों का कहना है कि उपग्रह प्रक्षेपणों की बढ़ती संख्या और पृथ्वी की कक्षा में बढ़ती भीड़ के साथ, सुरक्षित और टिकाऊ अंतरिक्ष संचालन सुनिश्चित करने के लिए वैश्विक मानकीकरण के प्रयास महत्वपूर्ण होते जा रहे हैं।
इन चर्चाओं में भारत की सक्रिय भागीदारी भविष्य के वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष शासन ढांचे में सार्थक योगदान देने के उसके इरादे का संकेत देती है।
इसरो की उपलब्धियां भारत की वैश्विक स्थिति को मजबूत कर रही हैं
अंतरराष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष मामलों में भारत के बढ़ते प्रभाव को भारतीय अंतरिक्ष अनुसंधान संगठन (आईएसआरओ) की उपलब्धियों से काफी मजबूती मिली है, जिसने लागत प्रभावी और तकनीकी रूप से उन्नत मिशनों के लिए वैश्विक मान्यता प्राप्त की है।
हाल ही में निम्नलिखित क्षेत्रों में मिली सफलताएँ:
चंद्र अन्वेषण
सौर मिशन
उपग्रह तैनाती
वाणिज्यिक लॉन्च सेवाएं
गहरे अंतरिक्ष अनुसंधान
इन उपलब्धियों ने भारत को विश्व की अग्रणी अंतरिक्ष शक्तियों में स्थान दिलाया है।
IN-SPACe सुधारों के तहत निजी क्षेत्र की क्षमताओं के विस्तार के साथ, भारत को वैश्विक वाणिज्यिक अंतरिक्ष अर्थव्यवस्था में एक प्रमुख उभरते हुए खिलाड़ी के रूप में देखा जा रहा है।
अंतर्राष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष मानकों का रणनीतिक महत्व
विश्लेषकों का कहना है कि वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष गतिविधियों के तेजी से विस्तार और व्यावसायीकरण में तेजी आने के साथ-साथ अंतरराष्ट्रीय अंतरिक्ष मानक तेजी से महत्वपूर्ण होते जा रहे हैं।
मानकीकृत प्रोटोकॉल यह सुनिश्चित करने में मदद करते हैं:
प्रणालियों के बीच अनुकूलता
परिचालन सुरक्षा
कुशल अंतर्राष्ट्रीय सहयोग
विश्वसनीय अंतरिक्ष संचार
सतत कक्षीय प्रबंधन
मिशन के जोखिम कम हुए
भारत जैसी उभरती अंतरिक्ष अर्थव्यवस्थाओं के लिए, मानकीकरण में सक्रिय भागीदारी विश्वसनीयता, निर्यात प्रतिस्पर्धात्मकता और अंतर्राष्ट्रीय तकनीकी एकीकरण को भी बढ़ाती है।
वरिष्ठ अधिकारियों और वैश्विक विशेषज्ञों ने कार्यक्रम में भाग लिया
उद्घाटन सत्र में राष्ट्रीय और अंतर्राष्ट्रीय स्तर के वरिष्ठ गणमान्य व्यक्तियों ने भाग लिया, जिनमें शामिल थे:
उपभोक्ता मामलों के विभाग की सचिव सुश्री निधि खरे।
श्री संजय गर्ग, महानिदेशक, बीआईएस
डॉ. पवन गोयनका, अध्यक्ष, इन-स्पेस
सुश्री रीना गर्ग, उप महानिदेशक (मानकीकरण), बीआईएस
श्री फ्रेडरिक स्लेन, अध्यक्ष, आईएसओ टीसी 20 / एससी 14
श्री राजीव ज्योति, अध्यक्ष, बीआईएस टीईडी 14 राष्ट्रीय दर्पण समिति
यह सम्मेलन अंतरिक्ष प्रणालियों के संचालन में अंतरराष्ट्रीय सहयोग को मजबूत करने में महत्वपूर्ण योगदान देने के साथ-साथ वैश्विक अंतरिक्ष मानकों के भविष्य को आकार देने में एक प्रमुख हितधारक के रूप में भारत के उभरने को भी सुदृढ़ करेगा।"
viernes, 8 de mayo de 2026
地球外法 : 宇宙政策・各国動向ガイド 2026年版 — 日米中欧印の宇宙戦略と法制度を徹底比較
Neuro-rights are the next evolution of the legal protection of the individual. An interdisciplinary approach is needed
Devices capable of recording or modulating brain activity originated for therapeutic purposes, such as motor recovery after a stroke or the treatment of neurological diseases. But the evolution of these tools makes the possibility of accessing cognitive processes and influencing them a reality. This gives rise to a question that is destined to become central: how to protect the mind in the age of neurotechnology? The international debate has introduced the concept of neurorights: principles and guarantees aimed at protecting the mental integrity of the individual.
The neurorights
Among the most discussed are the protection of mental privacy, the right to personal identity, the preservation of free will, non-discrimination based on brain data and equal access to cognitive enhancement technologies. The idea stems from the insight that neural data possess a qualitatively different nature compared to other personal information. While digital data describe behaviour or preferences, neuronal data reveal emotions, intentions and decision-making processes. The mind thus becomes a new space of legal vulnerability. Not surprisingly, some legal systems have started to question specific means of protection: Chile was the first country to introduce an explicit reference to the protection of brain activity in its constitution.
However, the issue is not only normative. On a philosophical level, neuro-law questions fundamental categories of modern law. If technology can directly intervene in cognitive processes, the distinction between inner freedom and outer control becomes more uncertain, with the risk of a control of personality.
At stake is not only privacy, but autonomy and the possibility of self-determination. The implications are also economic. Neurotechnology could enter work environments to monitor attention and fatigue or to improve cognitive skills. While this could increase productivity and safety, it also opens up questions about new forms of surveillance and inequalities between 'empowered' and 'non-empowered' workers.
Individual responsibility
Neurolaw also challenges a principle that modern law has always taken for granted: individual responsibility. If it is technically possible to intervene in the cognitive processes that precede a decision, who is responsible for that decision? The question will become a procedural one when the defence invokes the interference of a neural device as the exclusionary cause of guilt. Theregulatory answer requires an interdisciplinary approach: law, neurosciences, ethics, economics, and cannot chase innovation after years, as happened with big data and artificial intelligence.
The window for preventive intervention is open, but it is closing. Neuro-rights represent the next evolution of the legal protection of the person. The difference is that here the protected object is not an external datum, but the person in its most intimate dimension. Those who arrive late will have handed over their cognitive architecture to the market. The challenge will be to construct a regulatory framework capable of accompanying innovation without sacrificing what most profoundly defines the human experience: the freedom of the mind." link
jueves, 7 de mayo de 2026
legal study on the geopolitics of outer space
Three issues have direct commercial and legal implications:
- A fracturing legal order. The cooperative framework established under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty is giving way to competing governance models, national legislation and bloc-based approaches. For businesses, this increases legal uncertainty around access to orbital slots, spectrum, satellite data and future space resources. Capital-intensive projects across financing, operations and underwriting now face a more volatile regulatory environment.
- Who controls space infrastructure. Earth observation, communications and broadcasting, and position, navigation and timing data from satellites are now integral to decision-making and operations across finance, insurance, energy, agriculture and infrastructure. Governments are asserting greater control over commercially provided satellite data and communications services on national security grounds. For corporates and financial institutions, this raises real questions about data continuity, operational resilience, contractual risk, force majeure exposure and reliance on space-enabled services during periods of geopolitical tension. Many developing nations are also seeking to strengthen their autonomy through the development of national space programmes and the procurement of sovereign satellite capabilities.
- Sanctions and export controls. Space technologies sit at the heart of tightening sanctions and export control regimes worldwide. Dual-use export control rules are expanding to capture emerging technologies such as advanced computing, AI, quantum and semiconductors – many of which are embedded in everyday commercial supply chains. The result is heightened compliance risk for lenders, investors, insurers and corporates with cross-border operations.
Looking ahead, unresolved issues around space resource extraction, space debris, and the use of commercial satellites in military operations will further test existing legal frameworks. These developments increase the likelihood of disputes, regulatory intervention and liability exposure – factors that boards, risk committees and deal teams can no longer afford to treat as peripheral.
A fracturing legal order
On 1 April 2026, four astronauts launched aboard NASA's Orion spacecraft atop the Space Launch System rocket at Kennedy Space Center, venturing farther from Earth than any human has travelled since the Apollo era. Over ten days, Artemis II carried its crew on an arc around the Moon and back – completing a historic lunar flyby on 6 April before splashing down safely in the Pacific Ocean off San Diego on 10 April. It was the first time in more than fifty years that human beings had approached the Moon. The last crewed lunar mission was Apollo 17 in December 1972. The intervening half-century has not only seen vast advances in technology, but also a vastly different strategic environment – and a global economy that has quietly become dependent on the infrastructure that space provides.
The original space race was a product of Cold War rivalry, but also, paradoxically, the period in which the superpowers negotiated the international legal framework that still governs space today. The 1967 Outer Space Treaty. established space as a shared domain, committed to peaceful use and accessible in principle to all nations. For decades, these principles provided a stable framework for scientific collaboration, satellite deployment and international space missions.
Artemis II launched in a different world. China and Russia are pursuing their own lunar programme through the International Lunar Research Station. India successfully landed a rover near the lunar south pole in 2023. That region has become strategically significant because of evidence of water ice, a resource with potential for sustaining human presence and producing rocket propellant. Where resources are at stake, the law of property and sovereignty is never far behind.
Those principles are now being tested by the ambitions of states and the commercial enterprises racing to exploit the resources and orbital positions that space has to offer. The current moment differs from earlier periods of space competition in a fundamental respect. Private capital, commercial launch providers, satellite operators and technology companies are now embedded in the infrastructure of national security, economic productivity and strategic competition in ways that the architects of the UN space treaties could not have anticipated during the Cold War era. The legal framework has struggled to keep pace and continues to evolve.6
Space as critical infrastructure – and who controls it

Space infrastructure has become inseparable from the functioning of the global economy. Satellite systems underpin communications, navigation, financial infrastructure, environmental monitoring and defence operations. The strategic value governments place on that infrastructure is reflected in their allocation of spending. In 2024, global government spending on space programmes reached US $135 billion, of which US $73 billion – 54 per cent – was allocated to defence-related activities.
Governments are not only protecting existing assets in orbit but developing capabilities to contest them. A number of countries have demonstrated or tested anti-satellite technologies in recent years, highlighting the vulnerability of commercial and military satellites alike. Russia’s 2021 direct-ascent anti-satellite test generated a significant debris field that forced ISS crew to take shelter. China's counterspace programme has accelerated across direct-ascent weapons, electronic jamming and co-orbital manoeuvring. The United States has established Space Force as a dedicated military branch, reflecting its position that space must be defended and, if necessary, contested. France, India and the United Kingdom have each taken comparable steps through renamed services or new joint space command structures.
In December 2025, President Trump signed Executive Order 14369, ‘Ensuring American Space Superiority’, committing the United States to returning astronauts to the Moon by 2028, establishing a permanent lunar outpost by 2030 and deploying nuclear reactors on the lunar surface – underscoring the extent to which space has become a domain of active strategic competition.
Alongside these military developments, public and private investment has created a new category of infrastructure that sits uncomfortably between commercial enterprise and sovereign capability. SpaceX’s Starlink network – authorised by the US Federal Communications Commission for up to 15,000 second-generation satellites – is now so deeply integrated into military and civilian communications that it has been described as critical national infrastructure in all but name. Europe’s Eutelsat OneWeb is expanding its constellation of over 600 low-Earth orbit satellites through a new Airbus Defence and Space manufacturing contract, partly to underpin Europe’s ambitions for strategic autonomy in space communications. China's state-backed Guowang constellation makes no pretence of separating commercial from sovereign functions – it is sovereign infrastructure by design. The line between commercial operator and strategic asset is blurring, and with it the legal and regulatory frameworks that have historically treated the two as separate categories.
Nowhere is that blurring more apparent than in the treatment of satellite-derived data and services. Governments retain regulatory authority over satellite operators licensed within their jurisdictions and have demonstrated a clear willingness to exercise that authority. Whether the service in question is Earth observation data, communications connectivity, navigation signals or spectrum access, national security considerations can override commercial arrangements rapidly and with little warning.

In March 2025, the United States suspended Ukraine's access to the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency's imagery platform, which aggregated data from providers including Maxar Technologies, Planet Labs and Capella Space, as part of a broader pause in intelligence support to Kyiv. Similar restrictions have applied in the Middle East, where access to high-resolution imagery from US-licensed providers has been curtailed during periods of heightened military activity. Both examples illustrate the same principle: that commercially contracted satellite services can be switched off or constrained at the direction of government, with immediate operational consequences for operators and their customers.
For companies operating across communications, Earth observation and navigation services, managing contractual obligations to customers when access to services is subject to regulatory intervention – through force majeure clauses, material adverse change provisions or otherwise – is an important a legal consideration as the underlying licensing regime itself.
Sanctions and export controls
The commercial space sector operates at the intersection of some of the most complex and rapidly evolving areas of international law. For companies active in the sector, geopolitics is a direct source of legal and financial risk, with the potential to disrupt operations, void contracts and expose businesses to significant liability. For lenders, investors and insurers, exposure to space sector assets or supply chains carries with it a set of sanctions and export control obligations that belong on every deal team's checklist.
Export controls

Export controls are among the most technically demanding compliance challenges in the sector. Space technologies are, almost by definition, dual-use – that is, technologies developed or used for civilian purposes that also have potential military applications, and are therefore subject to export licensing controls in many countries. Satellite components, launch systems, propulsion technology and Earth observation equipment all fall into this category. Across key jurisdictions, these regimes have been actively strengthened in recent years:
- United States: The US’s International Traffic in Arms Regulations and the Export Administration Regulations remain the most globally significant regimes, given the pervasive reach of US-origin technology through international supply chains. Their extraterritorial effect means that non-US companies working with US-origin components or technology are subject to US controls, regardless of where they operate.
- European Union: The EU’s dual-use export control framework is set by Regulation (EU) 2021/821, which operates as a Union-wide regime not only for exports but also for brokering, technical assistance, transit and certain transfers of dual-use items. The EU updated its Dual-Use Control List in November 2025 under Regulation (EU) 2021/821 to reflect internationally agreed controls and commitments under multilateral export control arrangements, including the Wassenaar Arrangement.
The 2025 update added new controlled items relevant to frontier technologies, including quantum technology, semiconductor manufacturing equipment, and computing integrated circuits and electronic assemblies. This shift was driven in part by concerns that Russia had been using its Wassenaar membership to block consensus updates since its invasion of Ukraine, prompting the EU to act unilaterally to close the gap. - United Kingdom: The UK’s export controls regime is governed by a legislative patchwork, but controlled items can be found in the UK’s strategic Export Control List.
- In certain specific circumstances, dual-use items not found on these lists may also be subject to export controls. Similar to the EU, the UK’s export controls regime covers not only exports, but also brokering, technical assistance, transit and certain transfers of dual-use items. In recent years, the UK has amended its Strategic Export Control Lists, including updating them to better capture advanced computing, quantum technologies and semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
- Australia: The Defence Trade Controls Amendment Act 2024 (Cth) came into full effect in March 2025, introducing three new criminal offences covering deemed exports, re-supply and the provision of services involving dual-use and military goods listed on the Defence and Strategic Goods List (DSGL). Penalties reach up to ten years imprisonment and fines of AU$825,000 for individuals and $4,125,000 for body corporates.
- Japan: Amendments to catch-all export controls under the Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act (FEFTA) took effect in October 2025, introducing new restrictions on high-risk dual-use items including semiconductors and space objects (and parts thereof). A prior notification system was also introduced in December 2024 for overseas transfers of key technologies, reflecting growing government concern about technology leakage to countries of strategic concern.
- AUKUS: A notable development across the US, UK and Australian regimes is the establishment of licence-free environments for transfers between AUKUS partners, streamlining technology flows within the trilateral arrangement. For companies operating outside the AUKUS licence-free framework – including those with employees or contractors in non-partner jurisdictions – it adds a further layer of complexity to an already fragmented compliance landscape.
Sanctions
Sanctions regimes present a related but distinct set of risks for space sector participants, and one that extends across all major jurisdictions. The exclusion of Russian launch services following Russia's invasion of Ukraine is the most operationally significant recent example – companies that had contracted with Russian providers faced immediate disruption and difficult questions of contractual liability under force majeure and material adverse change provisions. In Alumina and Bauxite Company Ltd v Queensland Alumina Ltd [2024] FCAFC 142 — which affirmed the first Australian court decision to consider sanctions in the context of a commercial supply arrangement — the Full Federal Court of Australia held that a force majeure clause in a supply contract was properly invoked in response to autonomous sanctions imposed on a Russian national that ultimately owned (through a series of interposed corporates entities) the counterparty to the contract.
The consequences of sanctions extend beyond launch services. In the EU, the Russia sanctions framework includes restrictions on goods and technology suited for use in the aviation and space industry, and can extend to related financing, insurance and certain maintenance and repair services. The UK has similarly prohibited the provision of insurance or reinsurance services relating to aviation and space goods or technology to persons connected with Russia, among a broader set of prohibitions that may affect space sector participants.
For space sector companies, that challenge is structural. A single satellite programme will typically draw components, software and technical expertise from multiple jurisdictions, each subject to different licensing and sanctions screening requirements. A launch arrangement may involve a provider in one country, a payload from another and a ground station in a third. The intersecting obligations this creates – across export controls, sanctions, spectrum regulation and data distribution rules – require a coherent cross-jurisdictional compliance strategy, not a series of jurisdictional reactions.
Emerging legal challenges in the next phase of space activity

Several emerging issues are starting to shape the next phase of space law. The legal framework governing space resource extraction remains unresolved at the international level. The 2020 Artemis Accords – signed by 62 nations since 2020 – take the position that extracting space resources does not constitute national appropriation under the 1967 Outer Space Treaty, effectively endorsing private ownership of extracted materials. This sits in direct tension with the global commons approach of the Outer Space Treaty and the Agreement 1979, ratified by only 18 states, with Australia the only nation party to both instruments. Several states have moved to fill the governance gap, with Luxembourg, the United States, the UAE and Japan all enacting domestic legislation recognising private rights over extracted space resources – a divergence that represents a genuine source of legal risk for operators considering capital commitment to lunar or asteroid activities.
Space debris is where the consequences of regulatory gaps are most immediate. With over 54,000 pieces of debris larger than ten centimetres currently in orbit, and commercial mega-constellations continuing to grow, binding international rules on mitigation, active removal and liability apportionment remain absent. Work is being advanced by the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space, including through the development of the Guidelines for the Long-Term Sustainability of Outer Space Activities, but enforceable obligations have yet to materialise.
The integration of commercial satellites into active military operations adds a further dimension, raising unresolved questions about whether civilian protections under international humanitarian law apply when commercial infrastructure is being used for intelligence, surveillance and logistics support in conflict.
On-orbit servicing, in-space manufacturing and space-based infrastructure represent an emerging frontier that existing treaties were simply not designed to address. Regulatory frameworks will need to evolve to keep pace.
Conclusion: Navigating a new orbital order
The UN space treaties provided a reasonably stable legal foundation for space activities across several decades. That stability is now under structural pressure, driven by rising strategic competition between major powers, the rapid expansion of commercial activity and the proliferation of national legislation that existing multilateral frameworks were not designed to accommodate.
The practical implications extend well beyond the traditional space industry. For financiers structuring space sector transactions, export control and sanctions compliance is now a due diligence imperative. Insurers and underwriters face a related challenge – the integration of commercial satellites into active military operations raises coverage questions that existing policy frameworks have not yet resolved. For corporates that rely on satellite-enabled services – from payments and navigation to logistics and ESG monitoring – government intervention in data access and regulatory fragmentation present real operational risks. For satellite operators themselves, the legal framework governing what they are building, launching and planning to extract remains fragmented, contested and in significant respects unresolved.
On 10 April, the Artemis II crew splashed down safely in the Pacific, completing a mission that marks both an end and a beginning. The cooperative legal order that made the space age possible is giving way to something more contested, more commercial and more consequential for the businesses and institutions that depend on it. The decade ahead will determine what replaces it. link
miércoles, 6 de mayo de 2026
EEUU Malta e Irlanda firman los Acuerdos de Artemisa sobre la exploración y los usos pacíficos del espacio ultraterrestre. La ceremonia de firma tuvo lugar en Washington en presencia del administrador de la NASA, Jared Isaacman.
A la ceremonia, celebrada en Kalkara, Malta, asistieron el embajador de Estados Unidos, Somers Farkas, y el representante de la NASA en Europa. Gregory Mann, junto con el Ministro de Asuntos Exteriores y Turismo de Malta, Ian BorgEl mismo día, el Ministro irlandés de Empresa, Turismo y Empleo, Pedro Burke, firmó los Acuerdos en nombre de la República de Irlanda. La ceremonia de firma tuvo lugar en Washington en presencia del Administrador de la NASA, Jared isaacmany del Jefe de Gabinete del Subsecretario de Estado para Asuntos Económicos, William Cappelletti."
lunes, 4 de mayo de 2026
Space law workshop in Korea and drawing contest 🤓🎨🏛️
International Space Weather Initiative:
AI-Enabled Space Weather for Global Cooperation and Capacity Building
7 - 11 September 2026
Seoul, Republic of Korea
Co-organized by
the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA),
the Korea AeroSpace Administration (KASA), and
the Korea Space Weather Center (KSWC)
Co-Sponsored by
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Korea (MoFA),
the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI),
the Korean Space Science Society (KSSS),
the Korean Institute of Electromagnetic Engineering and Science (KIEES),
the Kyung Hee University (KHU),
the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST),
the ChungBuk National University (CBNU),
the Chungnam National University (CNU),
the Seoul Metropolitan Government (SMG),
the Seoul Tourism Organization (STO),
the International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (ICG), and
the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR)
Available Information
- Information Note
- Application Form (Deadline: Friday, 5 June 2026)
Introduction
Space weather is an inherently international matter. Solar and magnetic storms affect large regions of the Earth simultaneously and equatorial ionospheric disturbances occur routinely around the world. It is therefore appropriate for the United Nations to promote improvements in space weather modelling and forecasting for the benefit of all nations.
The International Space Weather Initiative (ISWI) was launched in 2009 and has developed research capacities in the scientific disciplines of Sun-Earth relations and space weather in many countries around the world. ISWI has established a platform that takes a bottom-up approach to produce space weather-literate communities to be able to work together as a network to share ideas, information and data and to develop joint projects.
Through this collaborative framework, ISWI has enabled scientists to use global navigation satellite system data in studies on space weather. These data have brought together scientists from various disciplines (such as seismology, the ionospheric physics and atmospheric science to work in the field of space weather. By building research capacity, ISWI has fostered space weather-literate communities capable of applying the fundamental physics of Sun-Earth relations to societal needs, providing valuable input for policymakers.
All achievements of international cooperation and coordination for ISWI, including instrumentation, data analysis, modelling, education, training, and public outreach, are made available through the ISWI Newsletter and the ISWI Website ( https://www.iswi-secretariat.org/).
The theme of the workshop, " AI-Enabled Space Weather for Global Cooperation and Capacity Building ", highlights the growing role of artificial intelligence (AI) and its applications in improving space weather activities including observation, modelling, operation, and forecasting. Building on ISWI's longstanding efforts in deploying instruments and developing research capacities in developing countries, the workshop will provide a platform for scientists, operational service providers, and policymakers to exchange knowledge on AI-based techniques, advanced data analysis, and their integration with existing space weather networks established through ISWI. It is also expected that the workshop will strengthen international cooperation, promote the sharing of data and best practices, and contribute to enhancing global capabilities in space weather researches and related services.
The United Nations/Republic of Korea Workshop on the International Space Weather Initiative: AI-Enabled Space Weather for Global Cooperation and Capacity Building will be held in Seoul, from 7 to 11 September 2026. This workshop is being co-organized by the United Nations Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) and the Korea Space Weather Centre (KSWC) of the Korea AeroSpace Administration.
The workshop is also supported by the International Committee on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (ICG), the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI), the Korean Space Science Society (KSSS), the Korean Institute of Electromagnetic Engineering and Science (KIEES), the Kyung Hee University (KHU), the Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), the ChungBuk National University (CBNU), the Chungnam National University (CNU), the Seoul Metropolitan Government (SMG), the Seoul Tourism Organization (STO), and the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR).
Objectives and expected outcomes
The main objectives of this workshop are to continue efforts in the deployment of instruments in developing countries and advancing the interpretation of space weather data; to focus on new research results and findings; and to strengthen international coordination and cooperation on space weather products and services.
The workshop will provide ample time for discussion open to all participants, and networking opportunities, as well as to address in-depth questions and answers on specific topics unique to a particular region.
The expected outcomes of the workshop will be recommendations for improved collection, exchange, and delivery of space weather data, as well as improved operational analysis, modelling and forecasting methods through the promotion of best practices and adoption of AI-based approaches, suggestions of means to improve accuracy, reliability, and interoperability.
The discussions at the workshop will also be linked to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and to its targets set out for Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). The workshop will contribute to:
- SDG 4: Quality Education. Continuation of the efforts in space weather education to better define and characterize severe space weather events and their probability of occurrence and assess their impacts on technological systems.
- SDG 9: Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure in protecting infrastructure from space weather. Effects on the ground can include damage and disruption to power distribution networks, increased pipeline corrosion, and degradation of radio communications.
- SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals. International coordination of operational space weather services, including monitoring, forecasting.
Preliminary Programme of the Workshop
The programme of the workshop will include a series of technical presentations addressing the following topics:
- Solar Sources and Heliospheric Propagation
- Solar eruptions - their sources at the Sun, propagation through the heliosphere;
- Flares and their impact on ionosphere, atmosphere, and the flare-Coronal Mass Ejections (CME) relationship;
- Coronal holes, high-speed streams, and the resulting Stream Interaction Regions (SIRs);
- Solar energetic particles and the associated phenomena, including coronal and interplanetary radio bursts;
- Geospace Response and Impacts
- Space weather extreme events and their impact on Geospace (magnetosphere, ionosphere, atmosphere, ground);
- Geomagnetic storms and radiation belt variability driven by CMEs and SIRs;
- Ionospheric irregularities and their effects on Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS);
- Spacecraft anomalies and other space weather impacts on technological systems;
- Modelling, Forecasting, and Operations
- Space weather modelling, simulation, and verification;
- AI applications for space weather modelling, forecasting and operations;
- Integration of AI-based tools with existing operational space weather systems;
- Research to Operation & Operation to Research (R2O2R);
- Instrumentation, Education, and Outreach
- Space weather instrumentation, including ISWI instruments and other observing systems;
- Capacity building for deployment instruments and AI applications;
- Data sharing, open-access resources, and international collaboration networks;
- Tools and methods for space weather education and outreach.
Poster session
A poster session will also be organized to allow speakers and participants to present their ideas and to share them with the other participants. The posters will be grouped by subject and authors will be at the posters for one of the two afternoon poster sessions according to the schedule in the programme." link
lunes, 20 de abril de 2026
Fuerza Espacial de EEUU se abre a la competencia en el programa de vigilancia Andromeda
En lugar de adjudicar un único programa, el Comando de Sistemas Espaciales está creando un grupo de múltiples proveedores que competirán por órdenes de trabajo a lo largo del tiempo; una estructura que refleja un cambio más amplio hacia estrategias de compra más distribuidas y competitivas en el sector espacial militar.
Junto a contratistas consolidados como Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, L3Harris Technologies y BAE Systems, participan diversas empresas nuevas o no tradicionales, entre ellas Anduril Industries, Astranis, Intuitive Machines, Quantum Space, Redwire, Sierra Space, True Anomaly y Turion Space, además de Space Mission Systems, General Atomics Electromagnetic Systems y Millennium Space Systems.
El programa Andromeda se centra en el conocimiento del dominio espacial: la capacidad de rastrear e interpretar las actividades de otros satélites en órbita. La primera orden de trabajo se centrará en las naves espaciales que operan en órbita geoestacionaria, a unos 35.000 kilómetros sobre la Tierra, donde se encuentran los satélites de comunicaciones y alerta de misiles más importantes del ejército estadounidense.
Estos sistemas suelen describirse como plataformas de “vigilancia vecinal” en órbita. Maniobran cerca de otras naves espaciales, las inspeccionan y monitorizan cualquier comportamiento inusual o potencialmente hostil, proporcionando un nivel de detalle que los sensores terrestres no pueden igualar.
Los nuevos satélites formarán parte de un programa conocido como RG-XX (Reconocimiento y Vigilancia Geoestacionaria), cuyo objetivo es reemplazar la flota actual del Programa de Conciencia Situacional Espacial Geoestacionaria (GSSAP). Los satélites GSSAP son muy capaces, pero costosos y de número limitado, por lo que las autoridades han estado buscando maneras de desplegar más sistemas que puedan actualizarse con mayor frecuencia. La órbita geoestacionaria se está volviendo más activa y disputada, y las maniobras de los satélites chinos están atrayendo una mayor atención por parte de los planificadores estadounidenses. La necesidad de mantener una visión continua y detallada de ese entorno está impulsando la demanda de modelos de adquisición más flexibles y competitivos."