Study Says Climate Change Will Even Make Earth’s Orbit a Mess

In this satellite image provided by CSU/CIRA & NOAA taken 1:10 GMT on Feb. 25, 2025, shows three cyclones, from left, Alfred, Seru and Rae east of Australia in the South Pacific. (CSU/CIRA & NOAA via AP, File)
In this satellite image provided by CSU/CIRA & NOAA taken 1:10 GMT on Feb. 25, 2025, shows three cyclones, from left, Alfred, Seru and Rae east of Australia in the South Pacific. (CSU/CIRA & NOAA via AP, File)
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Study Says Climate Change Will Even Make Earth’s Orbit a Mess

In this satellite image provided by CSU/CIRA & NOAA taken 1:10 GMT on Feb. 25, 2025, shows three cyclones, from left, Alfred, Seru and Rae east of Australia in the South Pacific. (CSU/CIRA & NOAA via AP, File)
In this satellite image provided by CSU/CIRA & NOAA taken 1:10 GMT on Feb. 25, 2025, shows three cyclones, from left, Alfred, Seru and Rae east of Australia in the South Pacific. (CSU/CIRA & NOAA via AP, File)

Climate change is already causing all sorts of problems on Earth, but soon it will be making a mess in orbit around the planet too, a new study finds.

MIT researchers calculated that as global warming caused by burning of coal, oil, gas continues it may reduce the available space for satellites in low Earth orbit by anywhere from one-third to 82% by the end of the century, depending on how much carbon pollution is spewed. That's because space will become more littered with debris as climate change lessens nature's way of cleaning it up.

Part of the greenhouse effect that warms the air near Earth's surface also cools the upper parts of the atmosphere where space starts and satellites zip around in low orbit. That cooling also makes the upper atmosphere less dense, which reduces the drag on the millions of pieces of human-made debris and satellites.

That drag pulls space junk down to Earth, burning up on the way. But a cooler and less dense upper atmosphere means less space cleaning itself. That means that space gets more crowded, according to a study in Monday's journal Nature Sustainability.

“We rely on the atmosphere to clean up our debris. There’s no other way to remove debris,” said study lead author Will Parker, an astrodynamics researcher at MIT. “It’s trash. It’s garbage. And there are millions of pieces of it.”

Circling Earth are millions of pieces of debris about one-ninth of an inch (3 millimeters) and larger — the width of two stacked pennies — and those collide with the energy of a bullet. There are tens of thousands of plum-sized pieces of space junk that hit with the power of a crashing bus, according to The Aerospace Corporation, which monitors orbital debris. That junk includes results of old space crashes and parts of rockets with most of it too small to be tracked.

There are 11,905 satellites circling Earth — 7,356 in low orbit — according to the tracking website Orbiting Now. Satellites are critical for communications, navigation, weather forecasting and monitoring environmental and national security issues.

“There used to be this mantra that space is big. And so we can we can sort of not necessarily be good stewards of the environment because the environment is basically unlimited,” Parker said.

But a 2009 crash of two satellites created thousands of pieces of space junk. Also NASA measurements are showing measurable the reduction of drag, so scientists now realize that that “the climate change component is really important,” Parker said.

The density at 250 miles (400 kilometers) above Earth is decreasing by about 2% a decade and is likely to get intensify as society pumps more greenhouse gas into the atmosphere, said Ingrid Cnossen, a space weather scientist at the British Antarctic Survey who was not part of the research.

Cnossen said in an email that the new study makes “perfect sense” and is why scientists have to be aware of climate change's orbital effects “so that appropriate measures can be taken to ensure its long-term sustainability.”



Saudi Space Agency Wins Four Platinum MarCom Awards

Saudi Space Agency Wins Four Platinum MarCom Awards
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Saudi Space Agency Wins Four Platinum MarCom Awards

Saudi Space Agency Wins Four Platinum MarCom Awards

The Saudi Space Agency achieved a distinguished international milestone by winning four Platinum Awards at the 2025 MarCom Awards, one of the world’s leading creative competitions in marketing, communications, and creativity, reported the Saudi Press Agency on Tuesday. The Platinum tier is reserved for entries that meet the highest standards of quality and innovation.

The agency’s awards covered four main categories: Best Campaign for launching the Knowledge Space Portal, Best Integrated Marketing Campaign for the public awareness initiative during World Space Week, Best Social Media Engagement Campaign for the same initiative, and Best Creative Design for the campaign.

The MarCom Awards are administered by the Association of Marketing and Communication Professionals. In 2025, the competition announced its winners after receiving more than 6,000 entries from 43 countries worldwide.

These achievements reflect the agency’s effective collaboration with partners from both the public and private sectors in awareness and outreach campaigns aligned with the goals of Saudi Vision 2030, supporting the Kingdom’s drive to build a knowledge-based, innovation-led economy.


Demand for Air Con Set to Triple by 2050, Warns UN

 A woman protects herself from the sun with a fan during a heat wave in Seville, Spain. (Getty Images/AFP)
A woman protects herself from the sun with a fan during a heat wave in Seville, Spain. (Getty Images/AFP)
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Demand for Air Con Set to Triple by 2050, Warns UN

 A woman protects herself from the sun with a fan during a heat wave in Seville, Spain. (Getty Images/AFP)
A woman protects herself from the sun with a fan during a heat wave in Seville, Spain. (Getty Images/AFP)

Global demand for air conditioning could more than triple by 2050, the United Nations warned on Tuesday, calling for more sustainable cooling solutions.

The UN Environment Program said demand could surge due to increases in population and wealth around the world, combined with more extreme heat.

Rising demand for more polluting and inefficient cooling systems "would almost double cooling-related greenhouse gas emissions over 2022 levels", said UNEP.

UNEP launched its Global Cooling Watch 2025 report on the sidelines of the COP30 UN climate summit in Belem in the Brazilian Amazon.

"Installed cooling capacity is on a trajectory to triple by 2050... Yet billions will still lack adequate protection from heat. We must reimagine cooling -- not as a source of emissions, but as a cornerstone of heat resilience and sustainable development," it said.

The most rapid growth in cooling demand is projected in Africa and South Asia.

"As deadly heat waves become more regular and extreme, access to cooling must be treated as essential infrastructure alongside water, energy and sanitation," UNEP chief Inger Andersen said in a statement.

"But we cannot air condition our way out of the heat crisis, which would drive greenhouse gas emissions higher and raise costs."

UNEP highlighted so-called "passive cooling" options, including better wall and roof designs, shading, solar off-grid solutions and ventilation.

The potential impact on indoor temperatures from passive cooling strategies range from 0.5 to 8 degrees Celsius.

"Passive, energy efficient and nature-based solutions can help meet our growing cooling needs and keep people, food-chains and economies safe from heat as we pursue global climate goals," said Andersen.

The Cooling Report suggested adopting such measures could reduce emissions to 64 percent below the levels otherwise expected in 2050.


Devil In The Beetails: Australian Scientists Discover New 'Lucifer' Bee

Archive - Bees from the apiary of the Universidad del Rosario raised for the research of the formula to protect the brain of bees and other pollinators affected by exposure to insecticides, which was patented in Britain under the leadership of researchers from the Faculty of Natural Sciences of the Universidad del Rosario, in alliance with the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Arizona - Reuters
Archive - Bees from the apiary of the Universidad del Rosario raised for the research of the formula to protect the brain of bees and other pollinators affected by exposure to insecticides, which was patented in Britain under the leadership of researchers from the Faculty of Natural Sciences of the Universidad del Rosario, in alliance with the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Arizona - Reuters
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Devil In The Beetails: Australian Scientists Discover New 'Lucifer' Bee

Archive - Bees from the apiary of the Universidad del Rosario raised for the research of the formula to protect the brain of bees and other pollinators affected by exposure to insecticides, which was patented in Britain under the leadership of researchers from the Faculty of Natural Sciences of the Universidad del Rosario, in alliance with the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Arizona - Reuters
Archive - Bees from the apiary of the Universidad del Rosario raised for the research of the formula to protect the brain of bees and other pollinators affected by exposure to insecticides, which was patented in Britain under the leadership of researchers from the Faculty of Natural Sciences of the Universidad del Rosario, in alliance with the Department of Neuroscience of the University of Arizona - Reuters

As if deadly snakes, spiders and sharks were not enough, Australia now has a new creepy critter: a "lucifer" bee with devil-like horns.

The species -- dubbed Megachile (Hackeriapis) lucifer -- was found in the state of Western Australia, Curtin University announced on Tuesday.

Kit Prendergast at the university's School of Molecular and Life Sciences discovered the bee while surveying a critically endangered wildflower in 2019 and was immediately drawn to the insect's unique appearance, said AFP.

"The female had these incredible little horns on her face," she said.

A fan of the Netflix TV show "Lucifer", she said the name was the perfect fit for the bee's distinctively devilish appearance.

"It's the first new member of this bee group to be described in more than 20 years, which really shows how much life we still have to discover," Prendergast said.

She added that she hopes the discovery will raise awareness about the number of undiscovered species that could still be out there, especially in areas threatened by mining.

"Many mining companies still don't survey for native bees, so we may be missing undescribed species, including those that play crucial roles in supporting threatened plants and ecosystems," she said.

"Without knowing which native bees exist and what plants they depend on, we risk losing both before we even realize they're there."

Almost all flowering plants depend on wild pollinators, particularly bees, but habitat loss and climate change are driving many vital species to the brink of extinction.