Japanese company aborts second satellite launch after take-off

18 December 2024, 03:54

The Kairos No. 2 rocket is launched from Space Port Kii in Kushimoto town, western Japan
Japan Rocket. Picture: PA

Space One aborted the flight after concluding it was unlikely to complete its mission.

A Japanese space startup said its second attempt to launch a rocket carrying satellites into orbit had been aborted minutes after lift-off, nine months after the company’s first launch attempt ended in an explosion.

Space One’s Kairos No 2 rocket lifted off from a site in the mountainous prefecture of Wakayama in central Japan.

The company said it had aborted the flight after concluding it was unlikely to complete its mission.

Space One aims to be Japan’s first company to put a satellite into orbit, hoping to boost the country’s lagging space industry with a small rocket for an affordable space transport business.

People watch Space One’s Kairos No. 2 rocket launch
People watch Space One’s Kairos No 2 rocket launch (Kyodo News/AP)

Wednesday’s flight, postponed from Saturday due to strong winds, came nine months after a failed debut flight in March, when the rocket was intentionally exploded five seconds after take-off.

The flight was carrying a government satellite that was intended to monitor North Korea’s missile launches and other military activities.

Space One said it had fixed the cause of the debut flight failure, which stemmed from a miscalculation of the rocket’s first-stage propulsion.

Japan hopes the company can pave a way for a domestic space industry that competes with the United States.

Tokyo-based Space One was set up in 2018 with investments from major Japanese companies, including Canon Electronics, IHI, Shimizu and major banks, to commercialise space delivery services at lower costs and regular flights as many as 20 times a year, compared to six currently planned by the government-led space programme.

Japan’s space development programmes are led by Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency, or JAXA, and industry leaders such as Mitsubishi Heavy Industries and IHI, as they develop two main flagship rockets, the large H3 rocket and the much smaller Epsilon, to cater to the growing satellite transport business.

By Press Association

Latest World News

See more Latest World News

Nigel Farage and Nick Candy have met Elon Musk at Donald Trump’s Mar-A-Lago mansion

Elon Musk giving 'serious thought' to Reform UK donation, Nigel Farage says after Mar-A-Lago meeting

Alan Jones Faces Court On Historical Sexual Misconduct Charges

Radio host and former Australia rugby boss Alan Jones denies 34 sex charges against 10 males

Former radio broadcaster Alan Jones leaves the Downing Centre Local Court in Sydney

Former Australia rugby coach denies indecent assault charges

Damage to the inside of a building s seen in Port Vila, Vanuatu

Casualty figures expected to rise after Vanuatu earthquake

Tory Lanez and Megan Thee Stallion

Megan Thee Stallion seeks restraining order against rapper who shot her

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson

Congress unveils stopgap US federal spending bill

President-elect Donald Trump speaks during a news conference at Trump Tower

Trump’s lawyers allege juror misconduct in fresh bid to overturn conviction

Rebecca Turner (pictured with her mother Anita) died in March

Tragedy as British tourist and boyfriend die after 'unwittingly taking lethal mix of drugs' in Thailand hotel room

Benjamin Netanyahu wearing a flak jacket in Syria

Israeli forces to remain inside Syria for foreseeable future, says Netanyahu

Suni Williams and Butch Wilmore on the ISS

Stranded astronauts’ stay on space station extended by another month

A Russian rocket launcher firing

North Koreans have ‘suffered hundreds of casualties’ fighting near Kursk

Floral tributes left outside the Abundant Life Christian School

Combination of factors led teenage girl to go on shooting spree, say police

The British Indian Ocean Territory (BIOT) or Chagos Islands

Starmer's Chagos Island deal on the brink as new Mauritius leader rejects agreement

Luigi Mangione

Luigi Mangione charged with murder as an act of terrorism after health insurance boss shot dead in New York

Luigi Mangione shouting at the media

Suspect in health insurance boss killing charged with murder as act of terrorism

A landslide in Vanuatu following an earthquake

At least 14 dead and hundreds injured after magnitude 7.3 earthquake off Vanuatu