U.S. Space Command said in a statement that last year's rocket reentry location could not be "pinpointed until within hours of its reentry." An agency spokesperson told CNN, it is monitoring space debris from this week's launch.
But experts emphasize the risk to people generally, and to the United States, is extremely low.
"We estimate that basically only 3% of the ground track is over the U.S.," said Lael Woods, a director at The Aerospace Corporation.
Generally, space agencies try to guide the reentry of rockets over a certain size to ensure they land somewhere that poses no threat to people, according Marlon Sorge, director of the Aerospace Corporation's Center for Orbital and Reentry Debris Studies.
If an object has a 1 in 10,000 chance of impacting an area where it could hurt somebody, NASA will try to control its reentry, Sorge told U.S. TODAY.
"It's fundamentally a low-risk thing, but it's way higher than it ought to be. It's 10 times higher than our thresholds," Ted Muelhaupt, a reentry debris expert working with the Aerospace Corporation, told U.S. TODAY on Wednesday.
"But the fact that we're having this conversation; the fact that people are out there tracking it ... watching it ... is an unnecessary thing. Even if nothing happens, people being ready in case something happens has costs."
NASA has rebuked China's space agency in the past for its allowance of uncontrolled reentries.
"It is clear that China is failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris," said NASA administrator Bill Nelson in a statement following the reentry of last year's rocket debris.
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