Blue Origin pledges New Glenn return to flight by end of 2026

Blue Origin chief executive Dave Limp said the company will launch its New Glenn rocket again before the end of 2026 after an explosion at its Florida site last week.

The explosion occurred during a static fire test on May 28 at launch complex LC-36A in Cape Canaveral. Limp wrote on X on June 1 that a preliminary survey showed the propellant farm, oxygen, liquid hydrogen and LNG tanks remained in good shape along with the water tower. The company will rebuild the site for the 7x2 variant of the rocket and shift to an alternative vertical launch concept. This approach eliminates the need to replace the transporter-erector damaged beyond repair in the incident. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman visited the company on May 29 and expressed full support for the recovery effort. The US Space Force, which manages the Cape Canaveral range, is also expected to provide assistance. Limp did not detail the cause of the failure but noted the BE-4 engine has performed well on prior flights of New Glenn and the Vulcan rocket.

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Grounded New Glenn rocket at Cape Canaveral after NG-3 upper stage mishap, with engineers reviewing failed orbit trajectory.
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FAA grounds New Glenn after NG-3 mission upper stage mishap

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The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has grounded Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket following a partial failure during its third mission, NG-3, launched Sunday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station. An upper-stage engine issue prevented the BlueBird 7 satellite from reaching its target 285-mile orbit, achieving only about 95 miles. This incident, the second grounding for the rocket, will halt flights pending investigation.

Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket exploded on Thursday night during a hot-fire test at its launch site in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The detonation created a large fireball visible in the surrounding area. Company founder Jeff Bezos confirmed that all personnel were safe.

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Blue Origin achieved a milestone by successfully landing and reusing the first stage of its New Glenn rocket for the third flight, but the upper stage failed to place its payload into the correct orbit. The launch occurred Sunday from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The booster, named Never Tell Me The Odds, touched down on a ship in the Atlantic Ocean after its second flight.

NASA's Artemis II mission lifted off successfully on April 1, 2026, from Kennedy Space Center in Florida, sending astronauts Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen aboard the Orion spacecraft for the first crewed Moon flyby since Apollo 17. Powered by the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket, the 10-day test flight will validate critical systems for future lunar landings and Mars missions, looping around the Moon's far side.

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NASA's Space Launch System (SLS) rocket is set to launch Artemis II as soon as April 1, 2026, sending four astronauts on a crewed flyby to the Moon's far side—the farthest from Earth any humans have traveled. This follows February's Artemis program adjustments addressing SLS delays, using the rocket's powerful core stage and boosters detailed ahead of liftoff.

NASA announced new contract awards on Tuesday for the initial elements of a planned lunar base, including two rovers and their delivery to the Moon. The moves support the agency's Moon Base initiative ahead of a crewed return scheduled for no earlier than 2028.

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SpaceX aimed to launch its redesigned Starship V3 rocket on May 22 after a technical issue halted an attempt the previous day.

 

 

 

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