Jeff Bezos' space company calls off debut
launch of massive new rocket in final minutes of countdown
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[January 13, 2025]
By MARCIA DUNN
CAPE
CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) — Blue Origin called off the debut launch of its
massive new rocket early Monday because of technical trouble. |
The Blue Origin New Glenn rocket stands ready on Launch Complex 36 at
the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, Saturday, Jan. 11, 2025, in Cape
Canaveral, Fla. (AP Photo/John Raoux) |
The
320-foot (98-meter) New Glenn rocket was supposed to blast off
before dawn with a prototype satellite from Florida’s Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station. But launch controllers had to
deal with an unspecified rocket issue in the final minutes of
the countdown and ran out of time. Once the countdown clock was
halted, they immediately began draining all the fuel from the
rocket.
Blue Origin did not immediately set a new launch date, saying
the team needed more time to resolve the problem.
The test flight already had been delayed by rough seas that
posed a risk to the company’s plan to land the first-stage
booster on a floating platform in the Atlantic.
New Glenn is named after the first American to orbit Earth, John
Glenn. It is five times taller than Blue Origin’s New Shepard
rocket that carries paying customers to the edge of space from
Texas.
Amazon’s Jeff Bezos founded the company 25 years ago. He took
part in Monday's countdown from Mission Control, located at the
rocket factory just outside the gates of NASA’s Kennedy Space
Center about 50 miles (80 kilometers) east of Orlando, Florida.
No matter what happens, Bezos said Sunday evening, “we’re going
to pick ourselves up and keep going.”
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