Isar Aerospace aborts second Spectrum rocket test flight

Isar Aerospace aborted the second test flight of its German Spectrum carrier rocket on Wednesday evening shortly before launch from Andøya spaceport in Norway. The countdown stopped unexpectedly just seconds before the planned engine ignition. The exact reasons remain initially unclear.

The „Onward and Upward“ mission was set to be the first launch of the Spectrum rocket carrying several small satellites. The attempt took place on March 25, 2026, around 9:21 p.m. local time but was halted about 20 minutes after the countdown ended. A live broadcast showed a boat detected in the safety zone around the coastal launch site, possibly contributing to the abort. Isar Aerospace chief engineer Nikolaos Perakis stated in the livestream that all rocket systems were in the green and the cause was now being investigated. The abort decision likely came from the computer, as CEO Daniel Metzler had told Handelsblatt: „With the launch in the last seconds of the countdown, the rocket takes full control of the launchpad.“ Ahead of the launch, Metzler said: „We want to show significant progress.“ The start had been delayed multiple times previously due to unfavorable weather. Isar Aerospace, based in Ottobrunn near Munich and founded in 2018, has raised over 500 million euros. The two-stage, 28-meter-high Spectrum rocket with ten engines is designed to deliver payloads of up to 1000 kilograms to low Earth orbits. During the first test in March 2025, the rocket lifted off from Andøya but crashed into the sea after 30 seconds. That was the first orbital rocket launch in continental Europe outside Russia. VC investor Nico Rosberg commented: „Even at SpaceX, launch aborts were part of the path to space. The rocket is ready, the technology is there, the next attempt is coming.“ Former ESA head Jan Wörner emphasized the importance of European sovereignty in spaceflight.

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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.

South Korean startup Innospace's Hanbit-Nano rocket, on its first commercial orbital mission, lifted off from Brazil's Alcantara Space Center but crashed about 30 seconds later due to an immediate abnormality. It was carrying five satellites for 300-km low Earth orbit. The failure occurred in a safety zone with no casualties.

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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.

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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Following a launch scrub on December 17, Japan's JAXA launched its eighth H3 rocket on December 22, 2025, from Tanegashima Space Center, but suspended the live broadcast after the second-stage engine shut down prematurely. The rocket carries the Cabinet Office's Michibiki No. 5 satellite for Japan's Quasi-Zenith Satellite System (QZSS).

NASA has canceled the Exploration Upper Stage for its Space Launch System rocket as part of a major revision to the Artemis program. The decision, announced by Administrator Jared Isaacman, aims to accelerate lunar landings by focusing on surface activities and using more efficient upper stages. This move supports testing of human landers from SpaceX and Blue Origin ahead of missions in 2027 and 2028.

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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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