
A silent crisis is unfolding just beyond our atmosphere. Tens of thousands of defunct satellites, rocket fragments, and microscopic shards of metal are orbiting Earth at lethal speeds, each piece a potential bullet in a crowded shooting gallery. Scientists warn of the Kessler Syndrome, a runaway chain reaction of collisions that could render entire orbital zones unusable for generations.
In this episode, we explore the escalating danger of space debris, how decades of unchecked launches, mega-constellations like Starlink, and the absence of enforceable cleanup laws have turned low Earth orbit into an orbital junkyard. But debris isn’t the only threat above our heads. We also uncover the risks of solar storms capable of crippling global power grids and asteroids that could rewrite Earth’s history in a single impact.
Through expert commentary, NASA data, and chilling near-miss incidents, “The Orbital Graveyard” examines why voluntary space governance has failed, the race for active debris removal (ADR) technologies, and how humanity’s most ambitious frontier could become its most dangerous trap.
Tune in for a deep dive into the politics, physics, and survival stakes of life in the space age, and what it will take to keep our skies safe for the future.
Written by Sumit Singh