Blue Origin launches NASA Mars mission and nails booster landing

Cape Canaveral, Florida - Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin successfully launched its New Glenn rocket on Thursday with NASA twin spacecraft destined for Mars aboard, and in a breakthrough nailed the landing of its booster.

A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launches on NASA's EscaPADE mission, which is carrying two satellites to orbit Mars, from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on November 13, 2025.
A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launches on NASA's EscaPADE mission, which is carrying two satellites to orbit Mars, from the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on November 13, 2025.  © REUTERS

The launch was stalled for days over weather both on Earth and in space, but in the rocket's second-ever flight, Blue Origin managed to recover the booster for reuse.

Ecstatic cheers rang out at the launch site in Florida's Cape Canaveral as the booster gracefully stuck its landing on a floating platform. Prior to Thursday, only Elon Musk's SpaceX had managed to accomplish such a maneuver with an orbital-class rocket.

Blue Origin's accomplishment comes amid intensified rivalry between the two billionaire-owned private space companies, as NASA recently opened up bids for its planned Moon mission.

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"Damn that was exciting!" said Jared Isaacman – a Musk ally whom President Donald Trump recently nominated again to head NASA – on X, congratulating Blue Origin.

A handful of figures at SpaceX also had praise for their rivals, including Musk himself: "Congratulations @JeffBezos and the @BlueOrigin team!" he said on X.

Blue Origin launch faced repeated delays

Spectators watch as a Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launches from LC-36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on November 13, 2025.
Spectators watch as a Blue Origin New Glenn rocket launches from LC-36 at the Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida on November 13, 2025.  © REUTERS

The launch was repeatedly delayed, on Sunday over weather on Earth, and on Wednesday over weather in space.

The second postponement was over "highly elevated solar activity" that NASA was worried could impact or damage its spacecraft.

And multiple glitches meant delays yet again on Thursday – hold-ups Blue Origin did not explain. But at 3:55 PM, New Glenn finally blasted off.

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The 322-foot rocket now has the task of sending NASA's ESCAPADE twin spacecraft to Mars, in a bid to study the Red Planet's climate history with the eventual hope of human exploration.

Applause resounded once more as the spacecraft successfully deployed.

Joseph Westlake, a NASA heliophysicist, explained during Thursday's webcast how the twin spacecraft named "Blue" and "Gold" will first find a "benign, safe parking orbit" to make "measurements about the space weather here on Earth."

Then, once the planets have reached the ideal alignment in the fall of 2026, the spacecraft will get a boost from Earth's gravity and begin the journey to Mars, where they will arrive in 2027.

This type of launch could allow for more frequent missions in the future, because they could proceed outside the window of direct alignment of Earth and Mars that happens approximately once every two years.

Blue Origin aims to "launch, land, repeat"

A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket carrying two satellites for NASA's EscaPADE mission to orbit Mars lifts off into space from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on November 13, 2025.
A Blue Origin New Glenn rocket carrying two satellites for NASA's EscaPADE mission to orbit Mars lifts off into space from Cape Canaveral, Florida, on November 13, 2025.  © REUTERS

New Glenn's inaugural flight in January also was marked a success, as its payload achieved orbit and successfully performed tests.

But its first-stage booster, which was meant to be reusable, was lost during descent.

Thursday's achievement signals that Blue Origin is on its way to reducing costs by reusing boosters rather than allowing them to plummet into the ocean.

"Launch, land, repeat – it starts today," said Eddie Seyffert, among Blue Origin's webcast commentators.

And it comes as US President Donald Trump's second term in the White House has seen the administration pile pressure on NASA to accelerate its progress to send a crewed mission to the Moon amid a race with China.

George Nield – a senior aerospace executive whose work promotes the commercial space industry, and who has flown with Blue Origin in the past – told AFP this launch was a big win for Blue Origin.

Nield called it "a major confidence booster for Blue Origin, and it's going to give the company credibility and the confidence to move forward with supporting the Artemis program, going to the Moon and on Mars and other things that are happening in low Earth orbit, like commercial space stations and many other projects."

Cover photo: REUTERS

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