Is Space an Accident Waiting to Happen? The Collision of Satellites, Debris, and Geopolitics

  • Thursday, October 15, 2026
  • 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM
  • Denver Museum of Nature and Science, 2001 Colorado Blvd. Denver, CO 80205
  • 135

Registration

  • Anyone who has paid for an Ambassador or Institutional Membership.
  • Anyone with the a la carte membership level or non-members.
  • Anyone who is not a member of DCFR or a guest of a DCFR member but would like to check out what we do!

The Denver Council on Foreign Relations presents:

The third Annual Future of Space Policy Forum and Expo©— bringing together the U.S. foreign policy and space communities to tackle complex questions neither can answer alone.

In 2026, the "Wild West" of space is getting crowded. With the U.S. transitioning space traffic management to civilian hands (TraCSS) and China rolling out their massive G60 and SatNet megaconstellations, the margin for error has shrunk. History tells us that large frontiers don't stay spacious for long. The 2026 DCFR Space Policy Forum asks a pointed question: in a domain with no governing authority and no "space police," who is responsible for defining and enforcing accountability — and who will foot the bill if no one steps up?

Key questions the panelists will tackle:

  • As private companies launch thousands of satellites beyond the reach of international law, how do we hold them accountable — and can national governments effectively regulate what their corporations do in orbit?

  • What governance models, international agreements, or emerging technologies give us the most reason for optimism that orbital space can be managed sustainably over the next decade?

  • What is the Kessler Syndrome, and is it something we should even worry about?

  • If a country simply fails to clean up its debris and critical orbital corridors become impassable, is that negligence — or an act of aggression?


Learn more here: https://denvercfr.org/future-of-space-policy-forum/