What Is a Mega-Constellation?
A mega-constellation is a large fleet of satellites — typically hundreds or thousands — operating in coordinated orbital planes to provide continuous global service. The concept has existed since the 1990s (Iridium, Globalstar), but modern mega-constellations operate at an entirely different scale.
Current and Planned Mega-Constellations
| Constellation | Operator | Active (2026) | Licensed | Altitude |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starlink | SpaceX | ~9,800+ | 12,000 (Gen1) | 480–550 km |
| OneWeb | Eutelsat | ~648 | 648 + 440 on order | 1,200 km |
| Kuiper | Amazon | Deploying | 3,236 | 590–630 km |
| Guowang | China SatNet | Deploying | ~13,000 | ~500–1,145 km |
| Qianfan (G60) | Shanghai Spacecom | Deploying | ~15,000+ | ~1,160 km |
Why Mega-Constellations?
Traditional GEO satellites provide wide coverage but with high latency (~600 ms round trip). LEO constellations sacrifice per-satellite coverage area for dramatically lower latency (20–50 ms) and higher throughput. The trade-off is that hundreds or thousands of satellites are needed for continuous global coverage.
Concerns
Space debris: More satellites mean more potential debris sources and more conjunction events. Astronomy: Bright satellite trails affect ground-based telescopes. Orbital congestion: Popular altitude bands are becoming crowded. Equity: The orbital resource is shared globally but dominated by a few operators. See Space Sustainability for the broader context.