High FrontierPublisher: Journeyman
Length: 40mins
Location: World
Copyright: ©ABC Australia
Published: 30 Sep, 2005
Last Updated: 4 Aug, 2010
Ref: 2815
PREVIOUS BROADCASTS INCLUDE - YLE, VRY, TVC, TG4, NRK, SVTOuter space is open for business. From orbits 36,000 km away, satellites run our daily lives and put missiles in contact with their targets. They see and hear everything. But this booming $50 billion dollar a year industry is virtually unregulated. Space has become the exclusive domain of the biggest and strongest. As space becomes increasingly commercialised and militarised, are we allowing the dangers to outweigh the potential benefits? This high-quality report investigates.
Few of us give a thought to the myriad of satellites bobbing thousands of kilometres above our heads. But they are an integral part of our daily lives, governing bank transactions, what we watch on TV, the Internet and stock market. We can’t see them, but they can see us – very clearly. “They really can read newspapers over people’s shoulders,” states space broker Jim Benson. It’s a business that generates billions every year for space brokers like Mary-Ann Elliott. "Over the last five years we’ve grown 1061 per cent," she boasts. “Natural resources in Space are on a first come, first served basis,” states Benson. Space buccaneers are developing plans to mine asteroids in space and celestial estate agents claim to have 2 million property owners on the Moon. According to the Outer Space Treaty, space belongs to the whole of mankind and should only be used for peaceful purposes. But in a post 9/11 world, security concerns are overriding. Space is becoming another military arena. During the Afghan war, America bought all available satellite images of Afghanistan, shutting everyone else out - including charities tracking refugees. “We want to be sure that potential adversaries don’t have the information which might help them hurt Americans,” reasons Col Patrick Rayermann. America, China and Russia are all believed to be working on powerful weaponry that can destroy enemies’ satellites, devastating their national economies. “At some stage, there will be a conflict which will involve taking out satellites because they’re already used in conflict situations for communication,” predicts international law expert Steven Freeland. “It raises interesting and difficult questions. Is a satellite a legitimate target of war?”There are also concerns that the nuclear energy now used to propel spacecraft to Mars may be a precursor to nuclear weapons in space. “Space is being nuclearised,” laments Prof Karl Grossman. “The United States has been involved for decades now in sending nuclear devices up. And what goes up, can come down.” UN attempts to ban war in outer space have all failed. “Every time the whole world votes to ban weapons in space, the US says no. It’s like them against the world on this,” complains Grossman. With laws still unwritten, the only obstacles to space exploitation are money and physics. But in an increasingly militarised world, how much need we fear our space adventure?
Comments
I liked the one-liner "our lives are run from space," referring to the use of satellites in capitalism.
Posted: Aug 22 2009, 07:15Report AbuseOverall, worth the watch. It's disconcerting about the chasm between the man on the street interviews about space and those involved daily in space issues. Add the deep-seated secrecy element, and a whole other dark world emerges. And the addition of space tourism (and R. Branson's claim that after tourists visit space will be official "astronauts" is ridiculous and more of a PR angle) brings an odd, exciting, and dangerous public element to the whole picture.
It would have been useful if the film revealed more of an investigation into the worldwide developments of anti-satellite technology, which would have helped with the issue of the fear about at what stage are we in the "militarization of space." And I would have liked to have seen more about the "power brokers" of the SATCOM world as well as other power brokers in the field of security and space.
There was an interesting and peculiar statement by millionaire 'celebrity' Mary Ann Elliot (of "Arrowhead Global Solutions"). She was asked if she would provide information that would give people a glimpse into Arrowheads "control center." She said she could not comment of that, and then said "its not that what were doing is that classified, it's just that if people put all of the pieces of the puzzle together then they would have the full picture."
Asked, "do you need to know what that information is that's being transmitted...do you worry about what's in it at all?" She responded with "No, I am not concerned, it is none of our business."
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