Moon

Nonprofit Opens Space Law and Ethics Institute

Image: NASA

For All Moonkind, a nonprofit dedicated to protecting the moon landing sites, has launched the Institute on Space Law and Ethics to develop guidelines for responsible behavior in space. 

The nitty-gritty: The institute will include a leadership board that will meet monthly as well as a group of fellows who will work on the project for two years outside of their normal job or school requirements, Michelle Hanlon, the founder of the nonprofit, told Payload. Their goal will be to draft a series of white papers that can consider ethical issues in space as quickly as the commercial sector is making advances, which often outpaces regulating bodies. 

“I’m here at the UN. I love COPUOS,” she said from Vienna. “But they’re not going to produce the law in the time that we need it.” 

First steps: One of the institute’s first white papers will focus on payload review, including for companies that deliver personal items to the Moon, Hanlon said. One example is Astrobotic, a space logistics company that charges individuals hundreds or thousands of dollars to send mementos like a family photo or wedding flower petal to the lunar surface in a MoonBox.

 “The idea of sending anything you want to the Moon because you have the money to do so is alarming,” she said. “If in May, we send 10 little personal items, in May 2024 it’ll be 1,000, then 50,000. Then all of a sudden, the moon is this big attic for rich people.”

Hanlon said the institute is aiming to release its study of this issue within three weeks. 

Other questions: Hanlon said the institute will also draft a manual on what obligations a nation has to its commercial actors in space. If, for example, another nation or business intentionally harmed a satellite or space station operated by an American company, it’s not clear what responsibility the military has to protect and respond–a question that has big implications for investors, too. 

Related Stories
MoonSatcomVC/PE

Australian Space Geology Firm Raises $100M Series D

”[T]ier one mining companies are taking notice…now they’re looking to put their foot on the gas.”

LaunchMoon

Starship Hired To Fly Two Lunar Rovers

The first Lunar Terrain Vehicle is expected to touch down in 2029.

BusinessCislunarLunarMoon

Intuitive Machines Targets February for Second Moon Landing

The company is now managing instruments on the Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter.

EOLunarMoonQ&ATechnology

What Makes Space AI So Tricky?

“There’s just really no certification standard yet for this type of flight software.”