Saturday, May 9, 2026

Opinions: Space access needs to become a two-way street

Plus: Rethinking the space business model in the face of resource scarcity
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05/09/2026

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Space News Opinions newsletter logo

In our May issue: Artemis 2 returned. The next missions are underway. What comes next as the United States races back to the moon? Read the magazine.

By Dan Robitzski


Welcome back to our weekly newsletter highlighting the opinions and perspectives of the SpaceNews community.


Space’s missing half


If space is going to become economically useful, then downmass, or bringing payloads from space back to Earth, needs to start getting the same focus as launch does today, according to an opinion article by Amir Blachman, president of the downmass firm Outpost. 


"Space logistics should be viewed as infrastructure, not vehicles, the same way prior generations understood railroads, container shipping and aviation networks," Blachman wrote. "Just as Eisenhower pioneered the construction of highways across the nation, helping the U.S. grow into an economic powerhouse, the next era of logistics demands building the highways to and from space."


Read the full article on SpaceNews here.

SPONSORED

Between resource scarcity and orbital inflation: rethinking the space model


The space industry's rapid expansion may soon run into trouble as it becomes clear that resources such as materials, energy and orbital capacity have their limits, according to an article by Eurospace Secretary General Olivier Lemaitre and Eurospace Research and Managing Director Pierre Lionnet.


"This raises a simple but uncomfortable question," the authors wrote: "Can we continue to increase indefinitely the mass we place in orbit each year? Or is it time to prioritize fewer, longer-lasting and more efficient systems?"


In the article, they suggested a handful of different strategies for space sustainability, some of which would require rethinking fundamental approaches to space launches and operations.


"The issue is no longer so much choosing between volume and efficiency, but rather accepting that the current model, based on continuous expansion, is gradually reaching its limits," they wrote. "That tension, between physical limits and strategic necessity, is where the future of the space sector will be decided. The sooner it is confronted, the better our chances of shaping it."


Read the full article on SpaceNews here.

SpaceNews is committed to publishing our community’s diverse perspectives. Whether you’re an academic, executive, engineer or even just a concerned citizen of the cosmos, send your arguments and viewpoints to opinion (at) spacenews.com to be considered for publication online or in our next magazine. If you have something to submit, read some of our recent opinion articles and our submission guidelines to get a sense of what we’re looking for. The perspectives shared in these opinion articles are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent their employers or professional affiliations.

FROM SPACENEWS

Register to join us on May 13 for our virtual event: Software Integration and Strategic Missile Defense

Missile defense at machine speed: On May 13, join SpaceNews and Wind River for a discussion that explores the mission assurance challenges behind missile defense initiatives, examining what military organizations must consider to ensure the software backbone connecting these systems remains resilient, interoperable and trusted in high-consequence environments. Register now.

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Friday, May 8, 2026

Top Stories: A record-breaking contract for Rocket Lab


Plus: Several countries joined the Artemis Accords
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05/08/2026

READ IN BROWSER

Space News This Week newsletter logo

In our May issue: Artemis 2 returned. The next missions are underway. What comes next as the United States races back to the moon? Read the magazine.

SPONSORED BY

Sponsored by Windriver

Welcome to our roundup of top SpaceNews stories, delivered every Friday! This week, Rocket Lab announced the company's largest launch contract to date, three countries signed the Artemis Accords, the schedule for Artemis 3 may be slipping and more.


If someone forwarded you this edition, sign up to receive it directly in your inbox every Friday.



Rocket Lab highlighted progress on Neutron during its May 7 earnings call, including testing of the rocket's Archimedes engine. Credit: Rocket Lab

Rocket Lab highlighted progress on Neutron during its May 7 earnings call, including testing of the rocket's Archimedes engine. Credit: Rocket Lab

OUR TOP STORY


Rocket Lab announces large launch contract and plans to acquire space robotics company

By Jeff Foust

Rocket Lab announced May 7 the largest launch contract in the company’s history as it also moves to acquire a space robotics company.


As part of its first-quarter earnings announcement, Rocket Lab said it signed a contract with a confidential customer for five launches of its Neutron medium-lift rocket and Electron launches. Those launches are scheduled for 2026 to 2029.


In an earnings call, Peter Beck, Rocket Lab’s chief executive, said the contract value exceeds the company’s previous record, a $190 million contract for 20 launches of Electron’s suborbital variant, HASTE, announced in March.


SPONSORED

Golden Dome will demand more than connectivity—it requires deterministic, mission-grade software from cloud to intelligent edge to ensure predictable, trusted outcomes.


Join Wind River and SpaceNews on May 13th to explore the future of missile defense, where sensor fusion, decision engines, and resilient software enable mission assurance allowing forces to adapt at the speed of software. We’ll break down what it takes to support hyper-connected missions that simply cannot fail. Because when it matters most, it runs on Wind River.

CIVIL


Artemis 3 plans remain uncertain as schedule slips

More than two months after NASA announced revised plans for the Artemis 3 mission, the agency has provided few details about the mission itself amid signs its schedule may be slipping.


Ireland and Malta sign the Artemis Accords

Two European countries, Ireland and Malta, signed the Artemis Accords at separate events May 4 as part of a surge of countries joining in the wake of the Artemis 2 mission.


Paraguay signs the Artemis Accords

Osvaldo Almirรณn Riveros, head of the Paraguayan Space Agency, signed the Accords in a ceremony in Asunciรณn, the capital of Paraguay, attended by a U.S. Embassy official and a representative of the Paraguayan Ministry of Foreign Affairs.


MILITARY


Rocket Lab joins Raytheon on space interceptor program for Golden Dome

Rocket Lab said May 7 it won new Pentagon-related defense business tied to the Trump administration’s Golden Dome missile defense initiative and to the expanding U.S. push to accelerate hypersonic weapons testing.


Scolese puts talent at center of NRO transition as he prepares to step down

Speaking May 6 at the GEOINT Symposium, director of the National Reconnaissance Office Christopher Scolese framed workforce challenges as a central issue for the agency he has led for nearly seven years and is expected to leave later this year.


Overview Energy wins Air Force contract to study space-based solar power for military bases

The startup, based in Ashburn, Virginia, announced May 6 it received an Air Force contract to study how space-based solar power could provide power to military installations, particularly in remote locations.

COMMERCIAL


Skyroot raises $60 million ahead of first orbital launch attempt

Indian launch startup Skyroot Aerospace has raised $60 million in a funding round that gives the company a valuation of more than $1 billion. The funding brings the total raised by Skyroot to $160 million.


Lawsuit claims Starship launches damage homes

As SpaceX prepares for the first flight of version 3 of its Starship vehicle, the company is facing a new legal challenge from local residents who claim its launches damage their homes.


Loft Orbital expands into full-service constellation deals

Loft Orbital began with what the industry called a “condosat” model, in which multiple customers shared a single spacecraft and each controlled their own payload. The company is now tapping demand from governments and private firms seeking sovereign constellations without taking on the cost and complexity of spacecraft development, procurement and operations.

illustration of a ring around the earth

SPONSORED CONTENT


Powering Unified Space Systems Operations

By Space42

n 2025, Space42’s systems helped save over 660 lives across 25 distress events, from earthquakes in Myanmar, Nepal, and Turkey to cyclones in Mozambique and floods in Nigeria. In each case, the difference between data received and aid delivered came down to connectivity, observation, and response working in unison.

FROM SPACENEWS

Register to join us on May 13 for our virtual event: Software Integration and Strategic Missile Defense

Missile defense at machine speed: On May 13, join SpaceNews and Wind River for a discussion that explores the mission assurance challenges behind missile defense initiatives, examining what military organizations must consider to ensure the software backbone connecting these systems remains resilient, interoperable and trusted in high-consequence environments. Register now.

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Opinions: Space access needs to become a two-way street

Plus: Rethinking the space business model in the face of resource scarcity  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌...