A few minutes after the sun retreated behind the Olympic Mountains, we spotted our first satellite. It moved across the sky with an eerie persistence, like a car on cruise control.
"That's low Earth orbit. That's pretty standard speed," Meredith Rawls, an astronomer at the University of Washington and my stargazing guide for the night, tells me.
The primal human experience of gazing into a dark, unblemished night sky — something we've been doing for at least 32,000 years, since our ancestors carved Orion onto a mammoth tusk — is vanishing. That nocturnal vista is becoming a dense, industrial field of orbiting debris.
"I tell people, go to a dark site and see the sky now, while it's like this," Rawls says, gesturing to the constellations above us. She lets out a laugh. "It's like, oh my God, what are we doing?"
The scale is hard to overstate. At the turn of the century, there were just over 700 active satellites in space. Now, with plans for hundreds of thousands more satellites — going from 15,000 today to half a million by 2040 — the new space race is not just a visual nuisance, it's a toxic threat to our existence.
When you look up at the night sky and wonder why the stars are moving, it's not because you're seeing a UFO. You're likely looking at a satellite, and two out of every three belong to Elon Musk's Starlink.
Starlink is capable of beaming an internet connection to a dish the size of a pizza box, virtually anywhere in the world. The company's on track for the largest initial public offering in history, largely on the back of all those satellites cruising through the skies.
When Starlink launched its first satellite in 2019, it kicked off a gold rush in space. Amazon plans to send up 60,000 of its own satellites, Chinese companies nearly 60,000 more. Everyone across the globe, it seems, wants a piece of the sky. Rwanda alone applied for 337,320 satellites. In January, Starlink filed for a million orbital AI data centers.
Spacefaring countries are technically bound by the United Nations' Outer Space Treaty of 1967, but commercial enterprises are another story. And with space increasingly seen as a new theater of war, many nation-states are racing to launch their own mega-constellations.
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