The End of an Era for an Orbital Giant
The headline refers to the International Space Station (ISS), the largest human-made object ever put into space. [10] Spanning an area roughly the size of an American football field, this 420-tonne orbital laboratory has been continuously inhabited by
astronauts since November 2000. [1, 6, 7] It serves as a premier research facility for experiments in microgravity and has been a symbol of cooperation between five major space agencies: NASA (USA), Roscosmos (Russia), JAXA (Japan), ESA (Europe), and CSA (Canada). [1] However, after more than two decades of service, the aging station is approaching the end of its operational life due to structural fatigue, rising maintenance costs, and the natural wear of orbiting the Earth 16 times a day. [11, 5]
The Final Countdown: A Multi-Year Descent
While the headline suggests an imminent plunge, the process is a carefully planned, multi-year affair. NASA and its international partners are targeting the end of 2030 for the station's retirement, with the final deorbit sequence likely occurring in early 2031. [3, 5] The descent will begin in earnest around 2028, using a combination of natural atmospheric drag and controlled engine burns from the station's own thrusters to gradually lower its orbit. [4] The critical final push will be handled by a specially designed U.S. Deorbit Vehicle (USDV), which will be launched and attached to the station. [2, 4] This vehicle, likely a modified SpaceX Dragon spacecraft, will execute a powerful re-entry burn to guide the ISS on its terminal trajectory. [3, 17]
Destination: The World's Most Remote Location
The target for this controlled crash is a location in the South Pacific Ocean known as Point Nemo. [10] Officially called the South Pacific Oceanic Uninhabited Area (SPOUA), it is the point on Earth farthest from any land, making it the world's designated spacecraft cemetery. [10, 18] It’s approximately 2,688 kilometres from the nearest shores, minimizing any risk to populated areas. [18] While most of the ISS is expected to burn up and vaporize during the intense heat of atmospheric re-entry, some denser and more heat-resistant components will survive. [2, 18] These fragments will join the debris of over 260 other spacecraft, including Russia's previous Mir space station, that have been disposed of in this remote location since the 1970s. [15, 18]
An Environmental Debate Emerges
The plan to sink such a large structure has sparked concern among some environmental experts. [5] Groups like The Ocean Foundation have raised questions about the long-term ecological impact of depositing space debris into the ocean, arguing that remoteness does not mean an absence of life or value. [4, 17] They point to a gap in international law, which currently doesn't require cleanup or environmental remediation for debris that falls on the high seas. [4, 17] NASA maintains that this is the most responsible and safest method for decommissioning the station, as leaving it in orbit would create a massive debris hazard, and other options like disassembly in space are prohibitively complex and expensive. [2, 10, 5]
What Comes After the ISS?
The end of the ISS does not signal an end to human presence in low-Earth orbit. NASA is shifting its strategy from owning and operating space stations to becoming a customer of commercial ones. [11, 13] The agency is fostering the development of private space stations through its Commercial LEO Destinations program. [13] Companies like Axiom Space, Vast, and a joint venture from Voyager Space and Airbus are already developing successors. [12] Axiom Station plans to attach its first module to the ISS before the latter is retired, eventually detaching to become a free-flying commercial outpost. [13] This new model will allow NASA to purchase services for research and technology development while focusing its own resources on more ambitious goals, like missions to the Moon and Mars via the Artemis program. [2, 11]















