By Burt Dicht
NSS Managing Director of Membership
The National Space Society is proud to celebrate one of our own: Dr. Austin Mardon, dedicated NSS member, polar researcher, educator, and tireless advocate for accessibility in space, has been awarded the 2025 Sir Arthur Clarke Award for International Achievement. This prestigious honor—sometimes referred to unofficially as the “Oscars of Space”—recognizes individuals who have made truly global contributions to advancing space exploration, science, and public engagement.
The award was formally presented on 28 October 2025 at the Gala Dinner during the British Interplanetary Society’s 22nd Reinventing Space Conference, held at London’s Royal Aeronautical Society. According to the official announcement, Dr. Mardon was honored “for his contribution to science literacy among the public, for promoting disability inclusion in space exploration through pioneering research, advocacy, and global outreach initiatives, and for finding 700 meteorites beyond the South Pole in Antarctica.”
For those of us who know Dr. Mardon’s story, this recognition feels especially fitting. His remarkable career spans polar science, space medicine, education, and humanitarian service. In May 2024, he received NASA’s Exceptional Public Service Medal—another testament to his lifelong commitment to expanding opportunity, advancing knowledge, and ensuring that space is a place for everyone (see our earlier blog post about this award which also has more on Dr. Mardon’s background and achievements).
“As the old motto per ardua ad astra reminds us, it is a rough road that leads to the stars. My own road has not been easy, but I believe we must all keep striving for that road less traveled, as Robert Frost so beautifully wrote.” —Dr. Austin Mardon
Dr. Mardon‘s work has a way of inspiring others to reimagine what is possible. Whether he is contributing to planetary science, helping students discover the wonders of the universe, or championing inclusive pathways to space, he reminds us that determination and curiosity can bridge any frontier.
On behalf of the entire National Space Society community, we congratulate Dr. Austin Mardon on this extraordinary and well-deserved honor! His achievements embody the spirit of exploration and the values that define our mission. We are proud to celebrate this milestone with him—and we look forward to the impact his work will continue to make around the world.




1 thought on “Arthur C. Clarke Foundation Honors NSS Member Dr. Austin Mardon”
I founded the Sir Arthur Clarke Awards, and the first presentations were made in 2005, so this year’s were engraved “20th Anniversary”.
The award is a glass block in the proportions 1x4x9, the monolith from “2001”, recognising Arthur’s science fiction, and engraved on the awards is the diagram from his 1945 paper on global communications, showing 3 satellites in geostationary orbit – “The Clarke Orbit” – recognising his science.
Arthur always said that he was very proud of these awards – known as the Arthurs – as they were the only ones in his name that were given for achievement in science.
There are a number of categories, and they have always been regarded as the Space Oscars, but unlike Hollywood, all the nominations come from the public. A panel of judges from the UK space community then votes, but they do not know the winners until the awards – which I have produced – are handed out on the night. The only exception is the International Award, selected by the Arthur C. Clarke Foundation.