Controversy
The UK Government
The Asahi Shimbun
Jack Thomas
Ian Whittaker
Kantaro Komiya
Apogee Magazine
Elizabeth Howell
ClearSpace
Engineerine
+4
Status:Open

Will at Least One Active Debris Removal Mission Launch by 2027?

UNLIKELYLIKELY

Claims

"2026 should see the deployment of more active debris removal (ADR) missions."Jan 12, 2026
ClearSpace
ClearSpace"[ClearSpace-1] is the first active debris removal mission, which will rendezvous, capture and remove a piece of space debris. The launch is scheduled from Europe’s Spaceport in French Guiana, starting second half of 2026."Jan 08, 2026
The Asahi Shimbun
The Asahi Shimbun"[Astroscale] added that it plans to start removing 'space junk' from orbit by the end of March 2028."Mar 21, 2025
Kantaro Komiya
Kantaro Komiya"Astroscale is working with the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) to demonstrate a commercial debris removal mission in 2027."Jan 08, 2026
Engineerine
Engineerine"EX-Fusion and EOS expect the [ground-based] initial detection system to be operational within the next two years. The full de-orbiting phase could take several more years."Apr 10, 2025
Astroscale
Astroscale"The [ISSA-J1] mission is expected to continue through Phase III, with completion targeted for March 2028."Jan 08, 2026
The UK Government
The UK Government"[We could] see the UK’s first national space debris removal mission launch in 2026."Sep 26, 2022
Elizabeth Howell
Elizabeth Howell"ClearSpace plans to launch an 'active debris removal mission' to take out a piece of space junk no earlier than the first half of 2026."May 09, 2023
Apogee Magazine
Apogee Magazine"ClearSpace also leads a team scheduled to deorbit an ESA Earth observation satellite in 2029 to demonstrate ADR technologies."Nov 17, 2025
Ian Whittaker
Ian Whittaker"Technology is being developed to address space debris – but this generally appears as concept mission plans with only a few trial tests being launched anywhere globally."Dec 27, 2025
Jack Thomas
Jack Thomas"ESA is pursuing a bold Zero Debris approach aiming to limit future debris production and integrate debris management into mission design by 2030."Dec 29, 2025
Climate Cosmos
Climate Cosmos"Japan’s ELSA-d mission and Switzerland’s ClearSpace-1, both set for demonstrations in 2025, represent the next generation of active debris removal systems."Dec 08, 2025




© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 6.18.0

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 6.18.0