
 Severe Warnings
 Severe Warnings
- Scientists Warn of Immense Solar Storm Threat
 May 4, 2006
 Discovery Channel, Canada
- As the world scrambles to prepare for hurricanes and earthquakes of unprecedented strength, some scientists say the sun poses an 
equal threat, with predictions calling for a 2012 sun storm of immense proportions. The vast space between the Earth and the Sun is 
filled with electrically-charged particles, radiation, magnetic fields, and electromagnetic energy that could play havoc with Earth in 
the event of elevated solar output. The last great solar super storm was 145 years ago. But, this event provides little context given 
our very recently-adopted dependence on satellite-based technologies.
 
 Last month, experts convened in Colorado during Space Weather Week (April 25-28) to discuss the issues surrounding the 
approaching 2012 event. If the storm turns out to be at the same scale as the one in 1859, economic disaster would ensue, with 
immediate costs around the $20 billion mark. Sten Odenwald of the QSS Corp., based at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt predicts that in the 2012 storm will kill only the oldest of the 300 geosynchronous Earth-orbiting (GEO) satellites. 
However the storm would likely reduce the life of all the other satellites by five to 10 years. These longer-term problems would add 
tens of billions of dollars more over the years, Odenwald says. The GEO satellites alone generate about $97 billion US in revenue 
each year.
 
 A solar superstorm could also:
- · force about 100 low Earth-orbiting spacecraft to undergo earlier-than-normal reentry
- · disrupt Global Positioning Systems the world over
 · force the International Space Station to lose altitude
