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On April 19, 2026 Blue Origin launched its New Glenn heavy-lift rocket from Cape Canaveral, reusing a first-stage booster that landed successfully.
The missionâs primary payload, AST SpaceMobileâs BlueBird 7 communications satellite, was placed into a lower-than-planned orbit after an apparent upper-stage anomaly.
Early telemetry and company comments point to one BE-3U upper-stage engine failing to produce sufficient thrust.
The US Federal Aviation Administration on April 20 ordered Blue Origin to conduct a formal mishap investigation under FAA oversight and to obtain agency approval of the final report and corrective actions before New Glenn may fly again.
US Space Force tracking indicates the upper stage and satellite re-entered and likely burned up.
AST says the satellite loss will be covered by insurance and has replacement hardware in production.
The FAA directive pauses New Glennâs planned commercial cadence and complicates Blue Originâs timelines for NASA lunar lander launches and Space Force certification.
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đ°ď¸ The Story So Far: An Evolving Timeline
Monday, April 20, 2026 01:01 UTC
FAA Grounds Blue Origin's New Glenn After Mishap
Friday, April 17, 2026 24:59 UTC
Blue Origin reuses New Glenn but satellite placed low








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