Blue Origin’s New Glenn explosion is a setback for NASA’s Moon plans

May 29, 2026
2,643 Views

While Blue Origin investigates the root cause behind last night’s spectacular explosion of its New Glenn rocket, it’s already clear that this will be a major setback for NASA’s Moon base plans and Amazon’s fledgling Leo space internet constellation.

The incident occurred at about 9pm at Blue Origin’s Florida launch site during a hot-fire test, where seven engines in the booster stage are lit while keeping the 322-foot-tall rocket fixed to the launchpad. The explosion and ensuing fireball severely damaged the only launchpad Blue Origin has for its New Glenn rocket.

“It’s too early to know the root cause but we’re already working to find it,” wrote Blue Origin boss Jeff Bezos on X. “Very rough day, but we’ll rebuild whatever needs rebuilding and get back to flying. It’s worth it.”

According to sources speaking to Ars Technica, the transporter-erector and one of the lightning towers at LC-36A may not be salvageable. “New Glenn almost certainly will not launch again in 2026, and frankly a launch during the first half of 2027 would be heroic given the launch site concerns,” writes Eric Berger, senior space editor at Ars Technica.

Such a delay would affect NASA’s Moon base plans. NASA announced on Tuesday that New Glenn would deliver a robotic lunar lander as soon as fall 2026. In 2027, Blue Origin is also scheduled to participate in the upcoming Artemis III mission, which will see astronauts docking their Orion capsule with lunar landers developed by SpaceX and Blue Origin.

“Spaceflight is unforgiving, and developing new heavy-lift launch capability is extraordinarily difficult,” said NASA administrator Jared Isaacman on X. “We will work with our partners to support a thorough investigation of this anomaly, assess near-term mission impacts, and get back to launching rockets.”

The New Glenn rocket that exploded Thursday night was being prepped to carry 48 Amazon Leo satellites — the largest batch ever slated for a single launch — into low-Earth orbit on an upcoming mission. The satellites were not onboard.

To date Amazon has launched just over 300 of the 1,618 Leo satellites the FCC requires by July 30, 2026. Amazon has applied for an extension to keep its license.

Amazon had been counting on New Glenn’s massive payload capacity and reusable boosters to accelerate a launch schedule that is already behind. Without its primary workhorse, Amazon will be forced to rely more heavily on secondary providers like United Launch Alliance (ULA) and Arianespace — and its chief rival, SpaceX.

“Sorry to see this,” wrote fellow billionaire spaceman Elon Musk on X. “I hope you recover quickly.”

Source link

You may be interested

FAA chief reacts to Mullin's suggestion to halt international flights to Newark over ICE protests
Top Stories
shares3,719 views
Top Stories
shares3,719 views

FAA chief reacts to Mullin's suggestion to halt international flights to Newark over ICE protests

new admin - May 29, 2026

Federal Aviation Administration Administrator Bryan Bedford is reacting to Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin's suggestion to halt international flights to…

Josh Abbott Honors Camp Mystic Victims in ’27 Little Butterflies’
Music
shares2,899 views
Music
shares2,899 views

Josh Abbott Honors Camp Mystic Victims in ’27 Little Butterflies’

new admin - May 29, 2026

[ad_1] The flood in the Texas Hill Country over July 4 weekend last summer had a profound effect on the…

Elvis’ devastation at co-star’s sudden death at just 24 ‘Nothing hurts more’ | Films | Entertainment
Movies
shares3,502 views
Movies
shares3,502 views

Elvis’ devastation at co-star’s sudden death at just 24 ‘Nothing hurts more’ | Films | Entertainment

new admin - May 29, 2026

One of Elvis Presley’s most famous movies has to be 1957’s Jailhouse Rock, which is on BBC2 this Saturday morning.…