A Piece Of Space Garbage Crashed Into A Florida Home, And The Family Is Asking NASA To Pay For The Damages

mode_list  - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only
mode_list - stock.adobe.com - illustrative purposes only

Back in March, a piece of space garbage from the International Space Station unexpectedly reentered Earth’s orbit and crashed through the roof of a home in Florida. The family who owns the house is now asking NASA to cover the damages.

When the federal agency disposed of some space junk that weighed about 5,800 pounds, officials believed the garbage would disintegrate in Earth’s atmosphere. But a small chunk of the debris managed to survive and crashed into a home in Naples, Florida.

The incident took place on March 8. The homeowner, Alejandro Otero, claimed that the trash tore through the roof and two floors of the house, narrowly missing his son.

The object left a gaping hole in the ceiling and floor. Otero was grateful that nobody got hurt, but he pointed out that the situation could have easily been a catastrophic one.

After analyzing the debris at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, NASA confirmed that it came from a 2.9-ton pallet of used nickel-hydrogen batteries jettisoned from the International Space Station in 2021. At the time, new batteries were installed on the space station, so they needed to get rid of the old ones.

However, the old batteries were disposed of in a different way than usual. According to NASA, a robotic arm removed the garbage from the exterior of the space station and flung it into Earth’s orbit.

Since the batteries would be traveling at more than 22 times faster than the speed of sound, the agency expected that they would take two to four years to burn up.

The European Space Agency stated that some objects in space might reach the ground, but the chances of them hitting a person are very low.

There are thousands of space junk pieces currently floating around in space, and most of them burn up as they plunge toward Earth.

mode_list – stock.adobe.com – illustrative purposes only

Still, some of it has made it back onto our planet before, so this isn’t the first time that space junk has struck.

For example, in Canada and North Carolina, portions of a SpaceX Dragon trunk were found. In addition, a piece of a rocket from the Indian Space Research Organization landed on a beach in Australia.

The damage they caused was less severe than at the Otero home, but it serves as a wake-up call to have better practices and policies in place.

The event has the potential to pave the way for how victims of similar incidents should be compensated in the future. It also could change the way that space debris is disposed of.

“Here, the U.S. government, through NASA, has an opportunity to set the standard or ‘set a precedent’ as to what responsible, safe, and sustainable space operations ought to look like. If NASA were to take the position that the Oteros’ claim should be paid in full, it would send a strong signal to both other governments and private industries that such victims should be compensated regardless of fault,” said Mica Nguyen Worthy, a partner from the law firm representing the Oteros.

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Emily  Chan is a writer who covers lifestyle and news content. She graduated from Michigan State University with a ... More about Emily Chan

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