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A United Nations list of every object launched into space, conceived during the cold war as a way to avoid paranoia and conflict, has been unavailable for months due to an unexplained IT problem.
“This is not OK,” says Jonathan McDowell at Durham University, UK. “Especially at a time of rising tensions in space, [with] accusations about bad behaviour flying back and forth between various space powers.”
The UN Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) oversees the UN Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), a place where 104 nations – many of whom have tense relationships with each other or are even in active conflict – can discuss and resolve technical, political or safety problems regarding space travel.
One part of UNOOSA’s job is to maintain a public list of every satellite launch around the world. This idea was first raised at the UN in 1961 and later expanded by the Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space in 1974 as a way to promote transparency around the space race, as countries were designing spacecraft with surveillance and military applications. The result is that countries must provide a name for each launched object, a date and place of launch, details on its orbit and the device’s general function.
But the Online Index of Objects Launched into Outer Space list has been unavailable for months, with the UN’s website saying only that it is due to “mandatory changes made to the UNOOSA website’s IT infrastructure”. UNOOSA didn’t respond to questions about the nature of the problem or how long it was expected to last.
McDowell says that the database has been unavailable for at least several months. The most recent updates to the list mentioned on the website – the last sign of it functioning – were made on 23 February.
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“It’s a security transparency regime that was agreed that has been working for 50 years, more or less. But it’s useless if the documents go to the UN and then no one can see them,” says McDowell. “Right now, we don’t know what the Russian satellites are and what they’re called. We don’t know what the US satellites are and what they’re called. The secret ones – they only get included in the UN filings.”
McDowell says that even secretive military or surveillance satellites were previously listed on the UN website, although their purpose would often be vague, such as “performing functions for the ministry of defence”, or disingenuous, such as “carrying out research and spacecraft techniques and technology” – but the mere fact that they were listed promoted at least some degree of transparency.
“It’s important to have at least an official reference [so] you can say, ‘well, you know, the Russians say they did this, the USA [say] they did this’. It served us well for years and we need to get back to it,” says McDowell.
Ram Jakhu at McGill University in Montreal, Canada, says the outage will “not only pose threats to international peace and security, but also hinder effective implementation of the UN treaties on outer space, particularly in cases of accidents caused by space objects and debris”.
The database is a very straightforward and basic list, but states taking part and publicly sharing information makes the world a slightly more predictable and safe place, says Thomas Cheney at Northumbria University in the UK.
“The international space-law regime is really permissive. You can do pretty much whatever you want up there,” he says. “And in exchange, we ask you to tell us what you’re doing. It’s more a symbolic statement.”
Cheney says the issue is a glimpse at the wider problem of the UN’s financial crisis, largely caused by the US withdrawing part of its previous funding. Another impact of that on space regulation was that UNOOSA’s COPUOS meeting in Vienna this year was two days shorter than usual to cut costs, says Cheney – another measure that puts strain on international relations.
“You get conversations between the Chinese and the Americans that only happen in Vienna because it’s done under the guise of the UN, and if it was a more formalised state-to-state meeting, it would be more complicated and a bigger deal,” he says.
Topics:

Facts Only

* A United Nations list of objects launched into space is unavailable due to an unexplained IT problem.
* Jonathan McDowell stated the unavailability is concerning given rising tensions in space.
* UNOOSA oversees COPUOS.
* UNOOSA maintains a public list of every satellite launch worldwide.
* The listing requirement originated at the UN in 1961 and was expanded by the Convention on Registration of Objects Launched into Outer Space in 1974.
* Countries must provide a name, launch date/place, orbit details, and general function for launched objects.
* The Online Index of Objects Launched into Outer Space list has been unavailable for several months.
* The UN stated the outage was due to "mandatory changes made to the UNOOSA website’s IT infrastructure."
* Updates to the list were last visible on February 23.
* Ram Jakhu stated the outage hinders effective implementation of UN treaties regarding space accidents and debris.

Executive Summary

A United Nations list of objects launched into space, conceived during the Cold War for security reasons, has been unavailable for months due to an unspecified IT issue. Jonathan McDowell noted this is problematic given rising tensions in space and accusations between space powers. The UN Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) manages the Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS), a forum for nations with tense relationships to discuss space issues. UNOOSA maintains a public list of satellite launches, established through conventions to promote transparency regarding military applications in space. While countries must list launched objects, their identities and details are currently obscured due to the system outage. Experts argue that this lack of transparency hinders international peace and security efforts, particularly concerning accidents involving space objects and debris. Furthermore, the disruption is contextualized by broader strains on international relations, referencing financial crises and reduced diplomatic opportunities within UN bodies.

Full Take

The functional disruption of a system designed as a security transparency regime creates a critical gap between stated international norms and observable reality. The core tension lies in the fact that transparency, intended to foster predictability and safety for over fifty years, is rendered inert by technical failure. This operational silence amplifies existing geopolitical anxieties; the inability to verify the identities of objects, especially those classified as military or surveillance assets, directly feeds mistrust between states. The observation that secretive entities only receive filings within the UN system suggests a bifurcated reality where public transparency operates on a fragile foundation, while sensitive information remains siloed outside official scrutiny. The impact extends beyond technical data loss to the very architecture of international governance; when formal diplomatic spaces like COPUOS are strained by cost-cutting measures or geopolitical friction—as noted by references to Vienna meetings and funding withdrawal—the functional failure of essential public registries serves as a potent, tangible symbol of systemic fragility. This pattern suggests that opacity in high-stakes domains is not merely an administrative error but an active mechanism that reinforces power imbalances, making the pursuit of collective safety contingent on access to verified information, which is precisely what has been removed.

Sentinel — Human

Confidence

This analysis is grounded in expert commentary regarding space transparency and international relations, showing high markers of human-driven journalistic synthesis rather than purely algorithmic generation.

Signals Detected
low severity: Sentence length variance shows natural variation typical of quoted academic/journalistic dialogue mixed with narrative exposition.
low severity: The piece flows logically from a technical problem (database outage) to its historical context, the need for transparency, and geopolitical implications without exhibiting mechanical hedging.
low severity: Attributions are specific (McDowell at Durham, Jakhu at McGill, Cheney at Northumbria) lending weight to the claims; the argument is built by weaving several expert viewpoints rather than just stating facts.
low severity: The core narrative rests on established historical/institutional context (Cold War transparency, UNOOSA mandate) and presents reported quotes; no immediate flags for confabulation were detected.
Human Indicators
Presence of specific, named academics citing the issue in a structured narrative.
The synthesis successfully connects disparate points (space data access, UN funding, diplomatic meetings) into a coherent argument.
UN space database aimed at easing global tensions is mysteriously down — Arc Codex