On 2/5/2023 10:22 PM, Roy wrote:
The other legal question is about Equatorial Orbits. These allow a satellite to appear stationary. You satellite TV uses these for
example. You point your antenna at the right spot and never have to
move it. These positions are all on the equator. This question was brought to the fore by the Bogota Declaration of 1976 in which eight equatorial countries claimed segments of the orbit directly above them
as integral parts of their national territories over which they
exercised complete and exclusive sovereignty.
According to Wikipedia, the Bogota Declaration didn't get much support
and seems to have been abandoned.
As I've said before, International Law doesn't have a built-in
enforcement mechanism, unlike both Civil and Common Law (which have a
police and court system). The countries could try the World Court, but
there are two problems:
1. The US is not subject to the World Court, and we are one of the
biggest users of the geostationary orbits, especially over South America including Bogota.
2. The countries that signed the Bogota Declaration don't have much
military power and no space capability. A claim not backed by power to
enforce it is pretty much useless in International Law.
From Wikipedia:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bogota_Declaration
This would have led to a space ownership issue of practical importance,
seen the satellites present in this geostationary orbit, whose slot
allocations were managed by the International Telecommunication Union
(ITU). These claims were seen as violating the 1967 Outer Space Treaty
and did not receive wider international support or recognition.
Subsequently, they were largely abandoned.[2]
I also note that Columbia (and I think the other nations in the Bogota Declaration) is a member of the ITU and hence subject to its rulings.
--
I do so have a memory. It's backed up on DVD... somewhere...
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