"Thus says the Lord: Set your house in order”

Okay, granted, that phrase was in a quite different context.  But our house, Planet Earth, is really messed up.  Junk everywhere!  WTF and for crying out loud?!  Are we that slobbish??  Well, yeah.

As usual, science to the rescue... maybe.

 
  • The European Space Agency finalized a contract to begin removing space debris in 2025.
  • ClearSpace was awarded a $105 million contract to use its space claw to extract space junk.
  • There are currently 129 million pieces of debris orbiting Earth.

The Great Pacific Garbage Patch is a vortex of trash located between America's West Coast and Japan. In fact, it's not only one patch—there's a western patch closer to Japan and an eastern patch bobbing around southern California. While the surface debris is bad enough, it turns out that 70 percent of the garbage sinks to the ocean's bottom.

"Out of sight, out of mind" is not an appropriate mantra if we want to continue space exploration. Last week, the European Space Agency (ESA) took the proactive step of finalizing a contract to begin space clean-up.  Beginning in 2025, the ClearSpace-1 mission will remove a washing machine-sized piece of junk—a payload adapter—with a four-armed claw spacecraft. After plucking it from space, the claw will force it downward until incinerated.

Cleaning up small junk is quite difficult—there's nothing akin to a pool skimmer in space yet—so ClearSpace, the company behind this project, will begin by grabbing a 112-kilogram payload adapter that was originally launched in 2013. The team is using a claw due to its mechanical flexibility; they tried a net as well, but given that you have to get it right on the first attempt, they wanted a bit of breathing room.

BigThink's full article:

 

Are you part of the "junk problem," or trying to be part of the "junk solution?"  

  • Do you, for example, recycle?  If yes, do you do so willingly, or is it a case of being mandated by your city?  IOW, is your heart in it?  
  • Do you ever litter (includes cigarette butts, gum wrappers, abc gum, etc.).
  • Do you consider yourself environmentally responsible?  Tell us (brag about) your “environmental principles.”

Thanks for posting!

(by Susan)

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