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Home » How we protected the UK and space in June 2025
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How we protected the UK and space in June 2025

By uk-times.com18 July 2025No Comments2 Mins Read
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June saw reduced levels of space activity with both uncontrolled re-entry and collision alerts at levels below the 12-month rolling average.

All NSpOC warning and protection services functioned as expected throughout the period.

Re-entry Analysis

June saw a 14% decrease in the number of objects re-entering Earth’s atmosphere, tracked by NSpOC, when compared with the previous month.

Of the 55 objects that re-entered, 50 were satellites and 5 were rocket bodies.

July 44, August 89, September 50, October 35, November 47, December 83, January 115, February 129, March 85, April 92, May 64, June 55

In-Space Collision Avoidance

Collision risks to UK-licensed satellites were lower in June with a 19% decline when compared with May, caused by fewer interactions between UK licenced objects and other spacecraft or debris over the previous 30 days.

July 1,795, August 2,137, September 3,041, October 3,181, November 2,722, December 2,142, January 2,694, February 2,567, March 2,588, April 2,620, May 1,546, June 1,259

Number of Objects in Space

The in-orbit population increased in June, with a net addition of 235 objects to the US Satellite Catalogue.

July 28,864, August 29,669, September 29,649, October 29,657, November 29,816, December 29,867, January 29,996, February 30,027, March 30,124, April 30,253, May 30,504, June 30,739

The number of Resident Space Objects (RSOs) reported may be subject to small adjustments over time as the way objects are tracked is refined. Figures in this report reflect the most current available data and may differ slightly from those published in previous months

Fragmentation Analysis

There have been no new fragmentation (break-up) incidents this month.

Space weather

June saw an increase in space weather activity, particularly geomagnetic events, compared to the previous month

The National Space Operations Centre combines and coordinates UK civil and military space domain awareness capabilities to enable operations, promote prosperity and protect UK interests in space and on Earth from space-related threats, risks and hazards.

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