Blue Origin
Blue Origin pushes first New Glenn flight to January 12
Blue Origin has pushed the first New Glenn rocket launch initially scheduled for January 10 to January 12 due to unfavorable weather around the Florida launch site.
On January 6, the company officially announced that the flight was targeting no earlier than January 10 from Launch Complex 36 at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station.
In a new statement published today, Blue Origin announced a new targeted launch no earlier than January 12. This delay was caused by a high sea state in the Atlantic Ocean where the first stage will land.
Based on a new announcement, Blue Origin will launch within a three-hour window that will open on Sunday at 1 a.m. EST.
The New Glenn is a two-stage rocket and its first stage will cut off after hot-staging to head back to the Earth and land vertically on the droneship named Jaclyn.
This will be the first flight for the New Glenn and the payload fairings are already deployed on top of the second stage as it awaits the launch.
Check more information about the mission here.
Pointy end up! New Glenn is vertical at LC-36 in Florida. Just need the sea to settle down a bit. Some context on our 1/12 target launch date—our objective is to reach orbit. Anything beyond that is a bonus. Landing our booster offshore is ambitious—but we’re going for it. No… pic.twitter.com/R76uArtxda
— Dave Limp (@davill) January 10, 2025