A safety panel highlighted the urgency of safely deorbiting the International Space Station (ISS) after it retires in 2030, warning of a catastrophe if the spacecraft were to make an uncontrolled reentry through Earth’s atmosphere.

NASA’s Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel (ASAP) urged the space agency to develop a space tug to deorbit the ISS, saying that the deorbit vehicle is “not optional,” according to Space Policy Online.

“The day will inevitably come when the Station is at the end of its life—and we may not be able to dictate that day—it is inconceivable to allow the Station to deorbit in an uncontrolled manner,” ASAP Chair Patricia Sanders said during a briefing at the panel’s third quarter meeting on Thursday. The ISS is “simply too massive and would pose extreme hazard to populations over a broad area of Earth. This needs to be resourced and resourced now if we are to avert a catastrophe.”

  • @PetDinosaurs
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    1911 months ago

    Why is this in scifi?

    This is the exact opposite of science fiction.

    • @unoriginalsin
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      Afaraf
      311 months ago

      Exact opposite? You sure about that?

        • @unoriginalsin
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          Afaraf
          111 months ago

          but not fiction

          If you believe what the round globists teach.

        • @PetDinosaurs
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          111 months ago

          Am I missing something?

          The exact opposite of science fiction is science fact. Or at least real science.

          What were you thinking?

          • JowlesMcGee
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            fedilink
            111 months ago

            Wouldn’t the exact opposite not have science at all? So if it’s science fiction, then the opposite would be fantasy fact (if such a thing even exists)