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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Science

Let Jules Verne crater on the moon be a new Point Nemo

A full moon is seen over Sydney during a lunar eclipse on September 8, 2025.
Kartar Uppal hopes countries agree to use the Jules Verne crater on the far side of the moon as a spacecraft graveyard. Photograph: Saeed Khan/AFP/Getty Images

I do hope countries agree to use the Jules Verne crater on the far side of the moon as a spacecraft graveyard to crash defunct equipment as they use Point Nemo in the South Pacific Ocean as a spacecraft cemetery (Patches of the moon to become spacecraft graveyards, say researchers, 22 December).
Kartar Uppal
Streetly, West Midlands

• In the 1980s, at the time of the nuclear incident in Ukraine, I was driving to the Suffolk coast, passing through Leiston, the nearest town to the Sizewell power station, upon whose town sign some wag had scrawled “Twinned with Chernobyl” (Letters, 26 December).
Margaret Philip
Scole, Norfolk

• We laughed when John Prescott said that the green belt was “a Labour achievement, and we mean to build on it”. We are not laughing now (Sport stars ‘deeply concerned’ playing fields will be lost under planning reforms, 22 December).
Jude Carr
London

• All over the country, volunteer fundraisers have been collecting to the music of Chris Rea (Obituary, 22 December). Thanks, Chris – enjoy the drive home.
Hilary Alder
Woking, Surrey

• I want to know why some choose a hill on which to die while others make their last stand in a ditch (The hill I will die on: Being late can be the height of good manners and decorum, actually, 24 December). Is it just geography?
Peter Gray
Chesterfield, Derbyshire

• “Trump class”? Now there’s an oxymoron (Trump announces plans for new navy warships to be known as ‘Trump-class’, 22 December).
Adrian Riley
Sheffield

• Thank you for your moving obituary of Muriel Manning in the print edition this week (Other lives, 22 December). This sort of article is why I read the Guardian.
Nigel Linford
Eastbourne, East Sussex

• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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