Space One cancels Kairos No. 3 rocket launch after safety activation

Tokyo-based space startup Space One canceled the launch of its Kairos No. 3 small rocket shortly before liftoff on March 4 from Spaceport Kii in Kushimoto, Wakayama Prefecture, after a safety system activated. The launch was scheduled for 11 a.m., but halted 30 seconds prior. The company plans a press conference that afternoon to explain the incident.

Space One announced the cancellation of its Kairos No. 3 rocket launch on the morning of March 4 from Spaceport Kii in the town of Kushimoto, Wakayama Prefecture. The rocket, measuring about 18 meters in length and weighing around 23 metric tons, features a three-stage solid-fuel engine along with a liquid-fuel engine. It was set to carry five small satellites, including those from private companies and a Taiwan space organization. A successful launch would mark the first time a rocket developed solely by a private Japanese company places satellites into orbit.

The original launch date was February 25, but it was postponed twice due to bad weather, including on Sunday, March 2. The company had two failed launch attempts with Kairos in 2024. "A safety system was activated 30 seconds before the planned launch," an official from the Tokyo-based startup said. "The fuselage is not broken." No new launch date has been set, and one will be announced once decided.

Founded in 2018 with investments from firms including Canon Electronics, Space One aims to provide services for delivering small satellites into space. The plan called for separating the first satellite about an hour after launch. The company will hold a press conference on the afternoon of March 4 to explain the cancellation.

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Illustration depicting the dramatic liftoff of Space One's Kairos No. 3 rocket from Space Port Kii before its mission abort.
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Japanese startup aborts Kairos No. 3 rocket flight after liftoff

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Japan's private space company Space One launched its Kairos No. 3 rocket on March 5 from Space Port Kii in Wakayama Prefecture but aborted the flight minutes later. This marks the third setback for the firm aiming to be the first private Japanese entity to place satellites into orbit.

Tokyo-based startup Space One has postponed the launch of its Kairos small rocket's No. 3 unit until March, citing a detailed weather analysis. The rocket is set to carry five satellites, with the launch window running until March 25.

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Japan's private space company Space One canceled the launch of its third Kairos small rocket on Sunday due to unfavorable weather conditions. This setback delays the company's effort to become the first Japanese private firm to place satellites into orbit using a domestically developed rocket. The attempt scheduled for Wednesday last week was also postponed for the same reason.

The Hanbit-Nano rocket, from South Korean startup Innospace, experienced an anomaly less than two minutes after takeoff from the Alcântara Launch Center in Maranhão on the night of December 22, 2025, thwarting what would have been the first orbital launch in Brazilian history. The vehicle was lost during the first stage's propulsion phase, and the onboard payloads were not recovered. Despite the setback, the incident is seen as normal for a new launcher's initial test.

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NASA has delayed the Artemis II mission to April 1 following a helium flow problem that rolled the rocket back from the pad, building on prior fixes for hydrogen leaks during fueling tests. This first crewed lunar orbit since 1972 faces ongoing maintenance before returning to the launch site.

Blue Origin has announced that its next New Glenn rocket launch will reuse a booster from a recent mission, marking a rapid turnaround in orbital rocket reuse. The NG-3 mission, set for no earlier than late February, will deploy a communications satellite for AST SpaceMobile from Cape Canaveral. This follows the successful NG-2 flight in November and highlights the company's progress toward faster launch cadences.

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Isro is set to launch 16 satellites via the pslv-c62 mission on January 12, 2026. The primary payload is drdo's 400-kg hyperspectral earth observation satellite eos-n1 (codename anvesha), developed for strategic surveillance. The mission includes innovations like India's first orbital ai laboratory and a $2 per minute space cybercafe.

 

 

 

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