NASA Administrator praising Blue Origin's recovery from rocket explosion at launch site
NASA Administrator praising Blue Origin's recovery from rocket explosion at launch site
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NASA chief praises Blue Origin progress after New Glenn explosion

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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said Blue Origin is making strong progress in recovering from the May 28 explosion of its New Glenn rocket that damaged the company's sole launch pad.

Isaacman spoke to reporters on Wednesday and noted that Blue Origin has devoted significant resources to cleanup at Launch Complex 36A. He added that the US Space Force has also been involved in the recovery planning.

"Blue Origin’s response to the situation is almost beyond impressive," Isaacman said. The agency’s preferred plan remains launching the Endurance Mk. 1 lunar lander mission on New Glenn before the end of the year.

Isaacman said NASA is still monitoring the timeline and receives daily updates. "We’ve got time into 2027 before we’re getting nervous," he said, while also studying backup launch options such as SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy or United Launch Alliance’s Vulcan.

Blue Origin chief executive Dave Limp stated that the company continues to investigate the anomaly, with early analysis pointing to the aft section of the first stage. The firm plans to use a crane to lift the rocket onto the launch mount rather than rebuild the full pad infrastructure.

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Initial reactions on X highlight NASA's praise for Blue Origin's rapid cleanup and reconstruction efforts following the New Glenn explosion. Journalists and users note impressive progress and commitment to lunar missions. Some express skepticism about ambitious timelines for return to flight, while others recall the dramatic failure negatively.

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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 plans to launch its New Glenn rocket again before the end of 2026 following a launchpad explosion at Cape Canaveral last month. The company has begun rebuilding the damaged facility in Florida. CEO Dave Limp stated the goal during a recent appearance at VivaTech.

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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.

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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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman has announced structural reforms aimed at reducing bureaucracy and focusing resources on key missions like returning to the Moon. The changes, detailed in an email to employees sent Friday morning, combine several directorates and empower field centers with stable funding. No jobs or centers will be closed as part of the effort.

NASA's Artemis II astronauts are returning to Earth after a 10-day journey to the far side of the moon, with splashdown scheduled for Friday evening. The agency will livestream the historic homecoming. NASA administrator Jared Isaacman stated that the mission is not over until everyone arrives home safely.

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