GENEVA — While SpaceX dominates the physical reality of Low Earth Orbit (LEO) with a staggering 10,653 active satellites, Beijing is playing a high-stakes regulatory chess game to lock the West out of future cosmic real estate.

According to global regulatory data analyzed by Wccftech, China has aggressively filed for a jaw-dropping 244,000 orbital slot reservations with the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). The move represents a regulatory reservation footprint that is roughly 128 times the size of China’s actual active presence in orbit—sparking widespread accusations of geopolitical “spectrum squatting.”
The Lax Rules of Cosmic Real Estate
Currently, the global space asset distribution remains highly asymmetrical. Out of the nearly 11,000 active satellites bearing a U.S. registration tag, the vast majority belong to Elon Musk’s rapidly expanding Starlink mega-constellation. In contrast, China maintains an operational fleet estimated between just 1,300 and 1,900 hardware assets.
To bridge this operational asymmetry, Beijing is exploiting loopholes in the ITU’s regulatory architecture. Under current, highly lenient international coordination rules, a nation does not need to possess the physical rockets to launch a constellation at the time of filing. The ITU’s current milestone deadlines are highly accommodating, requiring a member state to deploy:
- Just 10 percent of their filed constellation within 9 years of the initial application.
- 50 percent within 12 years.
- 100 percent only by year 14.
By filing a massive wall of paperwork for nearly a quarter-million orbital slots, China effectively establishes legal priority over those specific radio frequencies and orbital paths. Any commercial Western space company trying to launch later must spend years navigating complex, frustrating non-interference coordination rules, effectively paralyzing their development cycles.
The Industrial Delivery Gap
While Beijing has a proven track record of scaling its state-directed industrial base like no other nation on Earth, space analysts point out an irreconcilable chasm between China’s 244,000-slot paperwork ambitions and its current launch infrastructure.
China’s answer to Starlink—the Qianfan (Spacesail / Thousand Sails) mega-constellation—is moving into mass production but has launched only about 200 satellites to date. To fulfill even the basic ITU fractional milestones over the next decade, China would need an unprecedented, near-impossible launch cadence. For perspective, the newly constructed Hainan commercial space launch site currently operates just two active launchpads. With each pad structurally limited to roughly 16 launches per year, China’s current commercial infrastructure can physically field only a tiny fraction of its paper fleet.
The Race Beyond Internet: SpaceX’s “AI1” Factor
Compounding the urgency of China’s spectrum land grab is the rapid evolution of what those orbital slots will be used for. The race is no longer just about beaming simple broadband internet down to rural communities—it is transitioning into the deployment of orbital artificial intelligence supercomputers.
The regulatory clash comes directly on the heels of SpaceX officially unveiling AI1, its highly secretive, first-generation orbital data center satellite, as part of its historic $75 billion Nasdaq IPO filing. The massive AI1 spacecraft features a 70-meter deployed wingspan—wider than a Boeing 747—and is engineered around an open, interchangeable chip layout capable of pulling 150 kW of peak solar power to run heavy AI training and inference workloads entirely off Earth’s resource-constrained power grid.
SpaceX has already locked in major institutional commitments for this upcoming space-compute layer, including a blockbuster $920 million-per-month data deal with Google.
With companies like SpaceX, Jeff Bezos’ Blue Origin (which recently unveiled plans for a 51,600-satellite space data center framework), and startup Cowboy Space moving aggressively to turn LEO into a floating AI cloud, space is rapidly running out of both physical room and clean, unjammed radio spectrum. As the ITU prepares for its high-stakes WRC-27 treaty summit, China’s 244,000-slot “paper curtain” ensures that even if the West has the rockets to build the future, Beijing holds the keys to the frequencies required to turn them on.


