
Do we build “Elysium”?
A tranquil revolution is developing above our heads. In May 2025, NASA updated the road map to commercialization of low land orbit (Leo), determining the future in which private companies – not rule – discontinuous orbital platforms. This initiative is called Low economy of the Earth's orbit.
But one question arises for people from the ground:
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Who will live and work there?
And there is more disturbing:
Are we witnessing the early stages of real life Elysium– Where are the affluent in orbital luxury, and the penniless inherit the earth?
From research stations to orbital cities
NASA Leo efforts focus on replacing an aging international space station (ISS) for commercial alternatives such as Orbital reef AND Starlab. These platforms are aimed at handling research laboratories, space tourists and corporations.
According to NASA: “Our goal is to enable a solid orbit economy with low soil supported by many commercial places.”
(Source: NASA.gov)

Elysium is not only a movie
Science fiction 2013 movie Elysium He presented the land ruined by overcrowding and illness, while the affluent lived in a virgin orbital habitat. What once seemed fiction reflects the current development of access to commercial access to space.
Since space tourist places already cost over $ 50 million, and private stations are developed without clear guarantees of public access, critics warn that we can recreate dystopian dynamics in real life.
Who uses – who is not?
NASA's transition to privatization is sold as a savings strategy. However, the price of access remains astronomical:
- Spacex Crew Dragon Seat: ~ $ 55 million
- Private access to the orbital station: narrow to corporations and space agencies
NASA will be “one of many clients” – but what about scientists from developing countries, teachers and even average citizens?
Critics say that this modern space economy can rather expand unevenness and not solve it.
The economy over our heads
Leo offers the potential of biotechnology, material materials and pharmaceutical breakthroughs in zero gravity. But if this modern border is rejected to the highest bidders, it can even consolidate power in the hands of billionaires.
Who will be the owner of patents developed in orbit? And who benefits?
Signals from the ground
Ethics call on regulatory frames to prevent “Elysium script”. User on Reddit's R/futurology commented on:
“The future is not an American space. It is 1% construction houses above the climate apocalypse.”
NASA claims that she is democratizing access. But without featherlight pipelines for underestimated communities, this vision remains aspiration.
Conclusion: Science fiction meets reality
The low economy of orbit embankments on earth is not only about space – it is about who has access to progress. Without security, we risk building an orbiting paradise that reflects the worst unevenness of the Earth.
When the orbital economy rises, we must ask: will this future raise everyone – and only a few?
Image Source: Pixabay.com