Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

FCC Deciding Whether to Allow Startup to Launch Huge Mirror Satellite to Blast Sunlight on Cities at Nighttime

read original get Sunlight Reflection Satellite Kit → more articles
Why This Matters

The FCC's review of Reflect Orbital's plan to deploy massive mirror satellites marks a significant step toward potentially revolutionary space-based lighting solutions. If successful, this technology could transform urban lighting, renewable energy, and emergency response, but it also raises concerns about environmental impact and regulatory challenges. The decision could set a precedent for future large-scale space projects that blend innovation with environmental and societal considerations.

Key Takeaways

Sign up to see the future, today Can’t-miss innovations from the bleeding edge of science and tech Email address Sign Up Thank you!

The US Federal Communication Commission is reviewing an application to launch and deploy a massive mirror satellite in space that would reflect beams of sunlight onto darkened portions of the Earth.

In theory, it could be used to power solar farms, light up a city that never sleeps, or provide lighting during emergency scenarios, argues the startup behind the idea, Reflect Orbital. And the prototype satellite, equipped with a 60-foot mirror, would just be the beginning. Reflect Orbital envisions deploying 50,000 mirror satellites in orbit around the Earth — over five times the size of the largest satellite constellation in the world, operated by SpaceX.

“We’re trying to build something that could replace fossil fuels and really power everything,” CEO Ben Nowack told The New York Times.

It would be lucrative if pulled off. Nowack imagines charging about $5,000 per hour for the light of a single mirror, and potentially splitting revenues from the electricity generated by solar farms. By the end of 2028, he’s targeting the launch of 1,000 satellites.

The idea is as far-fetched as it is controversial. But something like it has been attempted before. In 1993, the Russian satellite Znamya, or “Banner,” deployed a 65-foot-wide sheet of mylar that reflected a beam of light twice as bright as the Moon, illuminating a roughly three mile wide circle onto the Earth below like an orbital spotlight. It didn’t prove to be practical, however, with ground observers noticing no more than a flash of light, and it was exorbitantly expensive to pull off.

Even so, it has the potential to massively disrupt the environment and interfere with many human operations. And the far-reaching consequences of such a technology is exposing the limits of the FCC’s remit.

Experts fear that light from space mirrors could disrupt circadian rhythms in nature, posing a problem for flora and fauna alike. Animals might breed at the wrong time, and hibernating insects and migrating birds could be confused, Martha Hotz Vitaterna, a research professor of neurobiology at Northwestern University, told the NYT. And plants could bloom when pollinators aren’t active.

“The implications for wildlife, for all life, are enormous,” added Vitaterna, who is co-director of the Center for Sleep and Circadian Biology.

Astronomers, meanwhile, fear that it could threaten their entire profession by interfering with observations of deep space — an issue that is already posed by satellite constellations that have ballooned in size in recent decades.

... continue reading