The maiden voyage of Blue Origin's massive new rocket won't be for NASA

Image Credits: Blue Origin (opens in a new window)

The world will have to wait a little longer to see Blue Origin’s massive New Glenn rocket fly for the first time.

That rocket had been scheduled to launch two spacecraft to Mars for NASA during an eight-day window that opens on October 13. But NASA announced on Friday that it was pushing the mission, called ESCAPADE, to spring 2025, citing potential cost and technical issues with de-fueling the two satellites. New Glenn will now launch some of the company’s own technology in November instead.

The first launch of a new rocket always poses enormous risk, both to the launch vehicle and the payload, and Blue Origin has been racing to get New Glenn ready for launch in a months’ time. Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp acknowledged in a post on X that there was still much to do: “Still lots to do but progress,” he said.

Recent reporting from Bloomberg which disclosed major testing failures of New Glenn hardware also suggests that the timeframe was ambitious.

An October launch would’ve seen the spacecraft arrive in Mars orbit in early September 2025. It’s unclear how long the transit time to Mars will be with the new launch window. NASA has not responded to TechCrunch’s inquiry by publication time. 

Instead of the ESCAPADE spacecraft, the first New Glenn mission, which has been pushed to November, will carry Blue Ring technology. It will also be the first certification flight under the Space Force’s National Security Space Launch (NSSL) program. Blue Origin must complete two successful New Glenn missions before it can start launching national security payloads under NSSL. 

Industry insiders say that NASA held a critical meeting yesterday on whether to fuel the two spacecraft; while NASA declined to comment, in a statement it essentially confirms that the risks of a launch delay after fueling were ultimately too large: “The decision was made to avoid significant cost, schedule, and technical challenges associated with potentially removing fuel from the spacecraft in the event of a launch delay, which could be caused by a number of factors.” 

The spacecraft, which were built by Rocket Lab, use hypergolic propellants that are highly toxic. Christophe Mandy, the lead systems engineer for the ESCAPADE mission at Rocket Lab, told TechCrunch in an interview last month that having to fuel, and then de-fuel, the spacecraft introduces risk to the two satellites. 

NASA and Rocket Lab aim to prove we can go to Mars for 1/10 the price

“If we are fueled, and then we have to de-fuel, getting the spacecraft cleaned increases various forms of risk in the spacecraft, which need to be handled,” he said. “So if they’ve been fueled, it opens up a certain amount of work in order to make the spacecraft back ready to launch.” 

NASAs Artemis I Moon rocket sits at Launch Pad Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center

Secretive moon startup led by ex-Blue Origin leaders raises new tranche of funding

NASAs Artemis I Moon rocket sits at Launch Pad Complex 39B at Kennedy Space Center

Image Credits: Eva Marie Uzcategui / Getty Images

A stealth startup led by ex-Blue Origin leaders, focused on harvesting resources from the moon, has quietly closed a sizable new tranche of funding, according to regulatory documents.

Interlune, a startup that’s been around for at least three years but has made almost zero public announcements about its tech, has raised $15.5 million in new funding and aims to close another $2 million. A representative for Interlune declined to comment on this story.   

This is the first public indication that the company has closed any funding since a $1.85 million seed round in 2022.

Much of what’s known about the startup was reported by GeekWire last October, when Interlune CTO Gary Lai briefly described the startup during a speech at Seattle’s Museum of Flight: “We aim to be the first company that harvests natural resources from the moon to use here on Earth,” he reportedly said. “We’re building a completely novel approach to extract those resources, efficiently, cost-effectively and also responsibly. The goal is really to create a sustainable in-space economy.”

Lai is an aerospace engineer whose resume includes a 20-year stint at Blue Origin, where he eventually became chief architect for space transportation systems, including launchers and lunar landers. Interlune is being led by Rob Meyerson, an aerospace executive who was president at Blue Origin for 15 years. Meyerson is also a prolific angel investor, with investments in well-known hardware startups including Axiom Space, Starfish Space, Hermeus and Hadrian Automation.

The filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission also lists attorney H. Indra Hornsby as a company executive. Hornsby previously held the position of general counsel at BlackSky and Spaceflight Industries, and also worked as an executive VP at Rocket Lab.

What little else is known of Interlune’s tech comes from an abstract of a small SBIR the startup was awarded last year from the National Science Foundation. Under that award, the company said it will aim to “develop a core enabling technology for lunar in situ resource utilization: the ability to sort ‘moon dirt’ (lunar regolith) by particle size.”

“By enabling raw lunar regolith to be sorted into multiple streams by particle size, the technology will provide appropriate feedstocks for lunar oxygen extraction systems, lunar 3-dimensional printers, and other applications,” the abstract says.

A growing number of space startups are focusing on what’s known as in-situ resource utilization (ISRU), or collecting and transforming space resources into valuable commodities. Much of this is driven by NASA’s stated priority to build a long-term human outpost on the moon via its Artemis program: The agency acknowledges that longer-term stays in space will require the ability to generate materials locally — whether that’s to build roads, produce breathable air or even make rocket propellants.

But it isn’t just startups that are trying to commercialize ISRU tech; last year, Blue Origin announced that it had made solar cells and transmission wires out of a material that’s chemically identical to lunar regolith.

In its February 2023 announcement on the tech, Blue Origin said, “Learning to live off the land – on the Moon and on Mars – will require extensive collaboration across the ISRU community.” The phrase is echoed in Interlune’s abstract: “The use of the Moon’s resources is a disruptive capability that will enable missions there to ‘live off the land,’ making the development of this technology important for government agencies and industry alike.”