No-Go For Starship Today, Next Try Maybe Next Week

No-Go For Starship Today, Next Try Maybe Next Week

SpaceX’s first attempt to launch Starship on its 13th test flight today didn’t go as planned. At the moment of startup, some of the 33 engines on Starship’s first stage didn’t light, triggering an automatic abort. They may try again as soon as next week.

Read More Read More

Russia Agrees to ISS Operations, Seat-Swaps, Through 2030

Russia Agrees to ISS Operations, Seat-Swaps, Through 2030

During meetings this week with NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman, Roscosmos Director General Dmitry Bakanov agreed that Russia will support operations of the International Space Station through 2030. Until now, Russia was committed only through 2028 even though the other ISS partners adopted 2030 several years ago. Bakanov also agreed to continue seat-swaps where Russia launches NASA astronauts, and NASA launches Russian cosmonauts, to the ISS on a no-exchange-of-funds basis.

Read More Read More

New Russian-American Crew Arrives at ISS

New Russian-American Crew Arrives at ISS

Russia launched a new crew to the International Space Station today, Soyuz MS-29.  Roscosmos cosmonauts Pyotr Dubrov and Anna Kikina, and NASA astronaut Anil Menon, docked at the ISS about three hours later for an 8-month mission.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy July 12-18, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy July 12-18, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of July 12-18, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in session this week.

Read More Read More

Japan’s ispace Expanding into Lunar Infrastructure

Japan’s ispace Expanding into Lunar Infrastructure

Japan’s ispace robotic lunar landing company is expanding into the lunar infrastructure business through an agreement with SpaceX. Instead of just landing on the Moon, they are offering end-to-end services starting with design through landing and mobile operations on the lunar surface.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy July 5-18, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy July 5-18, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the TWO weeks of July 5-18, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House and Senate are in recess this week except for pro forma sessions.

Read More Read More

Katalyst’s LINK On Its Way to Reboost Swift

Katalyst’s LINK On Its Way to Reboost Swift

Katalyst Space’s LINK on-orbit servicing spacecraft is on its way to reboost NASA’s Swift observatory. Northrop Grumman’s Pegasus-XL rocket launched LINK this morning, July 3, and contact was successfully established, the first step in a series of checkouts before it approaches Swift in what NASA calls a high-risk, high-reward effort. [Update, July 4: orbital parameters added.]

Read More Read More

Atlas V Launches More Amazon Leos with Only Six Starliner Flights Left on the Books

Atlas V Launches More Amazon Leos with Only Six Starliner Flights Left on the Books

United Launch Alliance sent another batch of Amazon Leo satellites into orbit today. Except for six rockets under contract to Boeing for Starliner missions, it was the last launch of the venerable Atlas V with its Russian RD-180 engines. When ULA will launch next is up in the air. No Starliner dates are set as Boeing and NASA continue to investigate what went wrong with the 2024 Crew Flight Test. ULA is replacing Atlas V with Vulcan, but Vulcan launches are on hold following an anomaly earlier this year.

Read More Read More

NASA Awards More CLPS Contracts, May Send Mars Rover Engineering Model to the Moon

NASA Awards More CLPS Contracts, May Send Mars Rover Engineering Model to the Moon

NASA awarded about $600 million in contracts to three companies today to put robotic landers on the Moon carrying NASA payloads. They are part of NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman’s “Moon Base” effort to send 10 robotic landers to the Moon every year beginning in 2027 during Phase 1 of the Moon Base project. One surprise is that NASA is considering repurposing an existing engineering development model of a Martian rover he calls PROMISE and send that to the Moon as well.

Read More Read More

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 28-July 4, 2026

What’s Happening in Space Policy June 28-July 4, 2026

Here is SpacePolicyOnline.com’s list of space policy events for the week of June 28-July 4, 2026 and any insight we can offer about them. The House is in session for part of the week. The Senate is in recess except for pro forma sessions.

Read More Read More