The US just approved a giant space mirror to test 'sunlight on demand.' Low Earth orbit is getting weird
A giant mirror to create "sunlight on demand" was just approved by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC), despite opposition from astronomers and the public, and real safety concer
A giant mirror to create "sunlight on demand" was just approved by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC), despite opposition from
Read Full Story at Phys.org โWhy This Matters
The approval of a giant space mirror for "sunlight on demand" signals a pivot in how humanity will interact with Earthโs environment, blurring the line between natural and engineered celestial mechanics. Beyond its immediate technical spectacle, the project challenges existing international norms around orbital sovereignty and environmental intervention, raising questions about who controls the skiesโand for what purpose.
Background Context
This isnโt the first attempt to manipulate sunlight from space; the Soviet Unionโs 1993 Znamya project and Chinaโs 2022 "artificial moon" experiments hint at a growing global race to harness orbital light for energy, agriculture, or even urban illumination. The U.S. FCCโs approval, however, marks the first formal regulatory greenlight for a commercial venture, bypassing traditional scientific peer review in favor of expedited commercialization.
What Happens Next
Expect rapid prototyping and deployment in Low Earth Orbit, with potential corporate and military applications emerging within a decadeโfrom extending daylight for solar farms to creating targeted illumination for disaster relief. Yet unresolved are the long-term risks: orbital debris, unintended climate feedback loops, and the weaponization of directed sunlight as a geopolitical tool.
Bigger Picture
This project is part of a broader shift toward "planetary engineering" startups, where space becomes a sandbox for climate intervention and industrial experimentation. As private actors outpace governments in orbital innovation, the absence of a unified regulatory framework risks turning the cosmos into a patchwork of competing interestsโwhere sunlight itself could become a contested resource.


