Starlink to Lower Satellite Orbits for Safety
By Reuters | 01 Jan, 2026
The operator of the world's largest constellation of satellites will lower their orbits from around 550 km to 480 km to avoid collisions.
Starlink will begin a reconfiguration of its satellite constellation by lowering all of its satellites orbiting at around 550 km (342 miles) to 480 km over the course of 2026, Michael Nicolls, SpaceX's vice president of Starlink engineering, said on Thursday.
The company is looking to increase space safety by lowering the satellites' orbit.
This comes after Starlink said in December that one of its satellites experienced an anomaly in space, creating a "small" amount of debris and cutting off communications with the spacecraft at 418 km in altitude, a rare kinetic accident in orbit for the satellite internet giant.
The company had said the satellite, one of nearly 10,000 in space for its broadband internet network, quickly fell four kilometers in altitude, suggesting some kind of explosion occurred on board.
"Lowering the satellites results in condensing Starlink orbits, and will increase space safety in several ways," Nicolls said in a post on social media platform X, adding "the number of debris objects and planned satellite constellations is significantly lower below 500 km, reducing the aggregate likelihood of collision."
The number of spacecraft in Earth's orbit has jumped sharply in recent years as companies and countries race to deploy tens of thousands of satellites for internet constellations and other space-based services such as communications and Earth imagery.
SpaceX, long known for its rocket launch business, has become the world's largest satellite operator through Starlink, a network of nearly 10,000 satellites beaming broadband internet to consumers, governments and enterprise customers.
(Reporting by Rishabh Jaiswal in Bengaluru; Editing by Chris Reese)
Articles
- Airports Step up to Feed Unpaid TSA Workers
- Don Struggles for a Face-Saving Exit from a Self-Created Nightmare
- OpenAI to Double Workforce to 8,000 by End of 2026
- BTS Comeback Concert Shuts Down Central Seoul
- United Cuts 5% of Flights, Plans for $175 per Barrel Oil
- Softbank, AEP to Build Massive Ohio Gas Power Plant, Data Center
- Musk's Liable to Twitter Shareholders, Damages to Be Determined
- Next-Gen Parenting for Success in an Automating World—for Yourself and Your Kids
- MLB’s Opening Day Odds and Value Picks
- Attack on Harvard Renewed with Another Antisemitism Suit
