“This is huge news for the Australian space industry and will create significant commercial opportunities for the Australian launch and spaceports sector.”
Fitting in with the Sydney Law School’s strategic vision of offering an innovative, global and diverse teaching program and led by Dr Connolly, the School has launched a space law teaching and research program. Its first post-graduate law unit of study on International Space Law will commence in August.
Space activities are no longer exclusively carried out by governments. In this commercial space age, private space companies pursue their corporate initiatives alongside and in partnership with, national space agencies.
The Space Foundation estimated that the global space economy was worth US$469 billion in 2021 and this is expected to grow to US$642 billion by 2030 (with some estimates as high as US$1 trillion). The domain of ‘space’ is now more congested, competitive, and commercialised than any previous era and there is a pressing need to regulate issues.
Space is recognised as a critical military domain, and we are witnessing a race between nations for space power. Nations around the world, including Australia have established military space command units in recognition that sovereign space capabilities are essential to national security. The USA, China, and Russia are investing heavily in their space programs, as space supremacy is a powerful advantage in the modern battlefield.
“The advances in space technology have brought with it new legal challenges including, but not limited to concerns relating to space debris, the cluttering of orbits, spectrum allocations, space militarisation and weaponisation, mining of space resources, space tourism, commercialisation and space sustainability.
“International law will be crucial in shaping the parameters of global space governance. We have a unique opportunity at this moment in time, to build upon existing international law to create purposeful multilateral agreements to address the emerging global challenges of space activities,” said Dr Connolly.