The
launch in Huelva in southwest Spain was scrubbed after the
countdown had reached zero, with flames and smoke briefly
shooting sideways from the launchpad, images showed.
Raul Torres, CEO and co-founder of PLD Space, said in a
statement that: "99.9% of all processes have been successful.
Launching a rocket is very difficult, but we are getting closer
and closer. We will try harder again."
The launch was halted after not all the "umbilical cables in the
avionics bay were released," the company said.
The suborbital mission from a military aerospace research centre
would have been the first of its kind in Western Europe.
Europe's efforts to develop capabilities to send small
satellites into space are in focus after a failed orbital rocket
launch by Virgin Orbit from Britain in January. That system
involved releasing the launcher from a converted Boeing 747.
PLD Space's Miura-1 rocket, named after a breed of fighting
bulls, is as tall as a three-storey building and has a 100-kg
(220-pound) cargo capacity. It can also be used to carry out
zero-gravity experiments.
An earlier attempt to carry out a suborbital test mission in
late May was postponed due to strong high-altitude winds.
The setback at the smallest end of the size scale came hours
after the postponement of the last ever launch of Europe's
largest, the premier Ariane 5 space launcher, from Kourou in
French Guiana.
Operator Arianespace said it had discovered a "risk to the
redundancy of a critical function" and had decided to postpone
the roll-out.
Analyses are underway to determine a new launch date, it said on
its Twitter feed.
The end of Ariane 5 will leave Europe without autonomous access
to space for several months after the Ariane 6 successor was
delayed.
The smaller Vega-C has been grounded following a failed launch
in December and Russia withdrew access to its Soyuz programme in
a rift with Europe over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.
The European Space Agency has transferred two launches to Elon
Musk's SpaceX including next month's deployment of the Euclid
space telescope, designed to explore the dark Universe.
(Reporting by Tim HepherAdditional reporting by Graham
KeeleyEditing by Sandra Maler, William Mallard and Frances
Kerry)
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