Blue Origin says blast spared key pad, fuel tanks

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1–2 minutes

Summary

Blue Origin said a launch pad blast destroyed some structures but left fuel tanks and other key systems intact.

Why this matters

The damage assessment affects Blue Origin’s timeline for returning New Glenn to flight and for supporting NASA’s Artemis moon program. The rocket is planned for lunar rover launches and for the company’s Blue Moon lander.

Blue Origin said Tuesday that last week’s rocket blast spared fuel tanks and some other key parts of its launch pad at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.

The company’s New Glenn rocket was lost during an engine-firing test. A lightning tower and the transporter-erector used to move and raise the rocket were destroyed, but Chief Executive Dave Limp said the methane, hydrogen, and oxygen tanks appeared to be in good condition.

The water tank was also undamaged, and the support tower that remained standing can be repaired in place, Limp said in a post on X. A booster and other rocket parts stored nearby were not damaged.

Overall, this was “a bit of good news,” Limp said, adding: “We will fly again before the end of this year.”

The setback affected a rocket central to NASA’s Artemis moon program. Two days before the accident, NASA awarded Blue Origin a contract worth hundreds of millions of dollars to use New Glenn rockets to launch two rovers to the moon ahead of the first Artemis astronauts who will use them. New Glenn also is slated to launch the company’s Blue Moon lander, which is intended to carry astronauts to the lunar surface in the coming years.

NASA was targeting as early as 2028 for the first astronaut moon landing since Apollo 17 in 1972.

NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said on X that the agency will “do all we can” to restore the pad “as soon as possible” while “staying extremely focused on progressing the lander.”

Blue Origin’s New Glenn reusable rockets, named after John Glenn, the first American to orbit Earth, have launched three times. NASA has also ordered SpaceX Starships, in addition to Blue Moon landers, for future Artemis lunar missions.

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