US splits on space-traffic rules: FAA pulls back, FCC's 5-year deorbit mandate holds
Commerce expands space situational awareness as active-debris-removal market and ADR insurance emerge
Summary
US space-traffic management rules are pulling in two directions in 2026. The FCC's aggressive 5-year post-mission deorbit mandate for LEO satellites under its licensing jurisdiction continues to be enforced, the toughest debris rule of any national regulator, replacing the old 25-year guideline. But the FAA withdrew its proposed 25-year disposal rule for upper stages and spacecraft, leaving a gap. The Commerce Department's Office of Space Commerce is expanding civil space situational awareness and data-sharing, the embryo of a national traffic-coordination function. A nascent active-debris-removal market, Astroscale, ClearSpace, and ADR insurance products are forming as operators face the prospect of funding removal if their own deorbit fails. Governance stays fragmented across FCC, FAA and Commerce, even as congestion worsens.
By the numbers
- 5 years, FCC post-mission deorbit deadline for LEO satellites (was 25).
- 25 years, FAA upper-stage disposal rule, now withdrawn.
- 3, federal bodies splitting authority (FCC, FAA, Commerce).
- 2, leading ADR firms (Astroscale, ClearSpace) building removal capability.
Why it matters
Rules made by one regulator on its licensees do nothing about foreign or unlicensed objects, and fragmented US authority undercuts any push for a global regime, even as megaconstellations multiply the things that must be tracked and moved. Who governs orbit is unresolved.
What to watch
- Whether Commerce stands up a real space-traffic-coordination service.
- Any move to revive a federal upper-stage disposal rule.
- First commercially funded active-debris-removal contracts.