• About
  • Advertise
  • Contact
  • Login
Newsletter
NRI Affairs
Youtube Channel
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other
No Result
View All Result
NRI Affairs
No Result
View All Result
Home Other

SpaceX, the New East India Company, and the New Frontier of Corporate Sovereignty

NRI Affairs Features Desk by NRI Affairs Features Desk
June 14, 2026
in Other
Reading Time: 4 mins read
A A
0
SpaceX, the New East India Company, and the New Frontier of Corporate Sovereignty

Image: @cb_doge on X

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

When the British East India Company (EIC) established its corporate strongholds across the Indian subcontinent, it did so under the banner of trade, commercial efficiency, and modern expansion. It operated with its own army, established its own de facto legal systems, and eventually outgrew the regulatory oversight of the British Crown that birthed it.

Today, a parallel corporate phenomenon is unfolding not on land, but in Low Earth Orbit (LEO).

As recently argued by economists Alessio Terzi and Stefano Marcuzzi in a Project Syndicate commentary, Elon Muskโ€™s SpaceX is rapidly evolving into a modern-day East India Company. By controlling the infrastructure of the final frontier, private tech monopolies are positioning themselves to escape sovereign state control entirely. For the global Global Southโ€”and nations like India with deep historical scars of corporate colonialismโ€”this shift demands urgent attention.


The Anatomy of Space Monopoly

The scale of SpaceXโ€™s dominance is unprecedented. The company does not merely launch satellites; it owns the entire vertical supply chain of modern space access:

  • Launch Hegemony: SpaceX rockets now carry the vast majority of the worldโ€™s payloads into space, rendering both NASA and European agencies deeply reliant on a single private citizen.
  • Infrastructure Capture: The Starlink constellation controls over half of all active satellites orbiting Earth, dictating global satellite internet access.
  • Geopolitical Leverage: From Ukraine to Taiwan, we have already witnessed a private individual single-handedly altering geopolitical conflict zones by turning Starlink access on or off based on personal whim.

Terzi and Marcuzzi point out that when a single entity controls critical infrastructure across international domains, it ceases to be just a businessโ€”it becomes a geopolitical actor operating beyond the reach of any single sovereign nation.


The Indian Subcontinentโ€™s Echoes: Public vs. Private Space

For India, the rise of the sovereign tech mogul strikes a deeply familiar historical chord. The subcontinent knows exactly what happens when a commercial entity is allowed to govern public commons.

However, Indiaโ€™s own space trajectory offers a powerful, alternative blueprint. Unlike the hyper-privatized, billionaire-led model of the United States, Indiaโ€™s space program, driven by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), has historically been a public-good mission.

  • Democratic Accountability: ISROโ€™s milestonesโ€”from the Chandrayaan moon missions to the Mangalyaan Mars orbiterโ€”were built on frugal engineering designed to uplift national infrastructure, resource mapping, and disaster management.
  • The Impending Shift: While India is now cautiously opening its private space sector to local startups via IN-SPACe, it faces a structural crossroads: Can public oversight be maintained, or will global monopolies like Starlink inevitably crush local sovereign capabilities?
500px The Battle of Goojerat on 21 February 1849
East India Company and ‘The Battle of Goojerat on 21 February 1849’. Coloured aquatint by J. Harris after H. Martens, published by Rudolph Ackermann, 29 July 1850.

The Regulatory Void: Who Governs the Commons?

The core danger of the new corporate space race is the complete obsolescence of international law. The Outer Space Treaty of 1967 was drafted for an era when only nation-states could afford to reach the stars. It asserts that space belongs to all of humanity and cannot be claimed by national sovereignty.

It did not, however, anticipate a private corporation launching tens of thousands of satellites to effectively colonise orbital pathways through sheer physical occupation.

If a corporate entity can dictate global internet connectivity, bypass national telecom regulations via direct-to-cell satellite technology, and control the orbital corridors of international commerce, it achieves what the East India Company did at its peak: absolute immunity from domestic laws.


A Call for New Non-Aligned Digital Alliances

To prevent the total corporate capture of the orbital commons, the international communityโ€”particularly the Global Southโ€”must treat space infrastructure as a strictly regulated global public utility.

Relying on the goodwill of Silicon Valley billionaires to maintain global communication lines is a critical vulnerability. Just as nations once had to dismantle the monopolies of chartered colonial companies to reclaim their sovereignty, modern democracies must now build multinational regulatory frameworks to rein in orbital monopolies.

Space must remain a shared horizon for human progress, not the personal fiefdom of the worldโ€™s wealthiest individuals.

Logo2
NRI Affairs Features Desk

NRI Affairs Features Desk

NRI Affairs Features Desk

Related Posts

Northern Territory backs Indian film festival expansion into Darwin and Alice Springs
Other

Northern Territory backs Indian film festival expansion into Darwin and Alice Springs

May 18, 2026
Historyโ€™s biggest census: why Indiaโ€™s new population count is controversial
Other

Historyโ€™s biggest census: why Indiaโ€™s new population count is controversial

April 21, 2026
Religious and secular groups take Trump to court
Other

Religious and secular groups take Trump to court

April 12, 2026

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended

Record number of Indians have attempted to enter the US from Mexican border

Record number of Indians have attempted to enter the US from Mexican border

4 years ago
Australiaโ€™s-skilled migration policy changed-how-and-where-migrants-settle

Melbourne hit-and-run accused Sakshi Agrawal tells court Tesla was on auto-pilot

4 years ago
Indian Student Targeted in Chicago-Attack!

Desperate Cry: ‘Please Help’ – Indian Student Targeted in Chicago Attack!

2 years ago
India wins major court battle in Australia over $111 million investment award

India wins major court battle in Australia over $111 million investment award

1 year ago

Categories

  • Business
  • Events
  • Literature
  • Multimedia
  • News
  • nriaffairs
  • Opinion
  • Other
  • People
  • Student Hub
  • Top Stories
  • Travel
  • Uncategorized
  • Visa

Topics

Air India Australia california Canada caste china cricket election Europe Gaza Hindu Hindutva Human Rights immigration India Indian Indian-origin indian diaspora indian student Indian Students Israel Migration Modi Muslim Narendra Modi New Zealand NRI Pakistan Palestine politics Racism Singapore student students tariff trade travel trump UAE uk US USA Victoria visa Zohran Mamdani
NRI Affairs

ยฉ 2025 NRI Affairs.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Video
  • Opinion
  • Culture
  • Visa
  • Student Hub
  • Business
  • Travel
  • Events
  • Other

ยฉ 2025 NRI Affairs.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com