Breaking 10:00 Head of Harvard’s endowment plans retirement, reports say 09:56 Morocco strengthens role in global forest governance talks 09:45 NextEra and Dominion discuss major merger to create energy Giant in the United States 09:15 Islamic State Leader killed in joint U.S.-Nigeria operation, Trump says 09:00 Vladimir Putin to visit China days after Donald Trump’s trip 08:30 Taiwan reaffirms its independent status after Trump’s warning 08:16 Morocco’s national security expands modernization drive at 70th anniversary 08:15 Chinese officials meet Citigroup and Goldman sachs executives in Beijing 08:00 FIFA and Iranian Football officials to hold talks over 2026 World Cup participation 15:47 Calls grow for US designation of polisario as terrorist group 15:00 Prediction markets face growing scrutiny over suspicious trading activity 14:45 Tech CEOs called to capitol hill for major senate hearing 14:40 Microsoft cancels Claude Code licenses and shifts developers to Copilot CLI 14:30 Starbucks cuts corporate jobs and restructures regional offices in the United States 14:15 German Chancellor Merz questions opportunities in the United States 14:10 Gold hits one week low as oil inflation fears weigh on metals 14:00 Private credit funds face pressure amid market uncertainty 13:33 Figure AI robots exceed 24 hours of warehouse operation test 12:00 Ackman’s Pershing Square takes new stake in Microsoft, citing attractive valuation 11:04 A viral video claiming Michael Jackson was spotted on a bus in Brazil is fake 10:35 UAE accelerates pipeline project to bypass Strait of Hormuz 10:17 Oil surge rattles markets as inflation fears intensify 10:12 Texas carries out its 600th execution since 1982

Satellite mega-constellations raise climate and ozone concerns

Friday 27 February 2026 - 07:00
By: Dakir Madiha
Satellite mega-constellations raise climate and ozone concerns

The rapid expansion of satellite constellations in low Earth orbit is drawing increasing concern from the scientific community. Researchers warn that the routine incineration of decommissioned satellites as they reenter the atmosphere could alter Earth’s climate and threaten the ozone layer. As companies like SpaceX seek approval to deploy up to one million satellites—far beyond the roughly 14,000 currently in orbit scientists and regulators are calling attention to the environmental gap in space policy.

In a recent commentary published in The Conversation, atmospheric chemist Laura Revell and astronomers Michele Bannister and Samantha Lawler compared the atmosphere to a “crematorium for satellites.” They estimate that burning one million satellites could release around one teragram, or one billion kilograms, of aluminum oxide into the upper layers of the atmosphere. Such deposits could drastically affect atmospheric chemistry and heating, though the full consequences are still uncertain. The warning comes as SpaceX, Blue Origin, and several Chinese state-backed programs file plans for massive orbital networks operating as AI data centers or global communication systems.

Scientific studies increasingly suggest that emissions from these satellite reentries are not trivial. Research from the University of Southern California published in Geophysical Research Letters found that each 250‑kilogram satellite emits about 30 kilograms of aluminum oxide when it burns up. In 2022, roughly 17 metric tons of these particles were released; by the late 2030s, annual totals could reach 360 metric tons as mega‑constellations scale up. Unlike short‑lived pollutants, aluminum oxides act as persistent catalysts for ozone depletion and could warm parts of the mesosphere by about 1.5°C, according to a 2025 NOAA‑CIRES model. Researchers warn that such changes may disturb polar vortex dynamics and long‑term atmospheric circulation.

Despite these warnings, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission remains exempt from conducting environmental assessments for most satellite launches under a regulatory carve‑out dating back to 1986. A Government Accountability Office review in 2022 urged the agency to reconsider that exemption, noting the unprecedented scale of current proposals. Lawler and her co‑authors argue that governments should set a safe limit on how much satellite material can be introduced into the atmosphere each year, emphasizing that no company should unilaterally decide how much pollution Earth’s upper air can absorb.


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.