Blue Origin New Glenn Explosion Casts Doubt on NASA’s Moon Timeline
On the evening of May 29, 2026, a New Glenn heavy-lift rocket built by Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin suffered a catastrophic explosion during a static fire test at Launch Complex 36 (LC-36) in Cape Canaveral, Florida. The blast sent a massive fireball and plume of smoke visible for miles, drawing intense scrutiny from the aerospace industry.
What Happened
According to The Washington Post and BBC, the explosion occurred during a ground test phase, not a formal launch mission. The rocket ignited and exploded while secured to the launch pad, causing significant damage to the LC-36 launch complex. Local Florida media captured dramatic aerial footage showing the extent of the destruction.
This is Blue Origin’s second major incident in recent months. On April 25, 2026, a New Glenn rocket malfunctioned during its third flight, delivering a customer satellite into the wrong orbit. The latest explosion has compounded concerns about the rocket’s reliability.
Impact on NASA’s Artemis Program
The explosion poses a direct threat to NASA’s Artemis lunar exploration program. Blue Origin is developing the “Blue Moon” lunar lander, which has been selected as the crewed landing vehicle for the Artemis V mission. The New Glenn rocket was slated to carry the Blue Moon lander to lunar orbit.
BBC science correspondent Pallab Ghosh noted that the explosion represents not just a technical setback for Blue Origin but a substantive risk to NASA’s Moon exploration timeline. If New Glenn’s testing and certification are significantly delayed, subsequent Artemis missions could face further postponements.
The SpaceX Contrast
Notably, just hours after the New Glenn explosion, a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket successfully launched 29 Starlink satellites from the same region. The juxtaposition underscored SpaceX’s dominance in launch reliability and frequency.
The Falcon 9 has completed hundreds of successful launches and recoveries, while New Glenn has conducted only a handful of flights. Industry observers say the explosion will leave Blue Origin at an even greater disadvantage in the fiercely competitive commercial launch market.
What Comes Next
Blue Origin has not yet disclosed the cause of the explosion. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is expected to launch an investigation, and New Glenn’s subsequent testing and launch schedule will be paused pending its completion.
Analysts suggest the incident could prompt NASA to reassess its reliance on a single supplier, particularly as competition in the commercial space sector intensifies.
Source: The Washington Post, BBC, WSJ