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Space Explored Podcast: Blue Origin aiming for New Glenn debut and Starship Flight 7

Terminal Count is a weekly newsletter and podcast discussing the current events of the spaceflight industry. This week, Seth discusses the upcoming new administration, Blue Origin’s debut with its New Glenn rocket, Starship Flight 7, and more.

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Terminal Count: Blue Origin aiming for New Glenn debut and Starship Flight 7

We’re only into the first full week of the new year, and it’s already looking pretty packed, with Blue Origin looking to debut its New Glenn rocket while SpaceX is gearing up for its seventh Starship rocket. Both of these missions could have dynamic schedules, so it’s possible we’ll just be stuck with a handful of Starlink missions as well.

Checkout the podcast version of Terminal Count here.

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Is 2025 the year we find a real SpaceX competitor?

Falcon 9 dragon liftoff

SpaceX has been the de facto launcher for most of the world ever since the Falcon 9 started ramping up its launch cadence and lowering costs about a decade ago. While many companies say they compete with SpaceX, in reality, they are a monopoly for commercial launch; if you need something done quickly, it’s going to be on a Falcon 9. Is 2025 finally the year we see another option emerge?

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SpaceX 2024 launch stats: Starship, SLC-40 is king, and more

SpaceX launched its final mission of the year early this morning. Unshockingly to anyone, that was a batch of Starlink satellites. Tomorrow starts a whole new year of launching rockets, but how did SpaceX do in 2024? What sort of takeaways can we get for what we’ll see in 2025?

After tracking all of SpaceX’s launches over the year, here are the highlights.

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One-third of SpaceX’s Starlink missions launched from the West Coast in 2024

Before the year is out, SpaceX will have launched 138 rockets in 2024, the vast majority out of the busiest spaceport in the world, Cape Canaveral. With the need to fit more Starlink missions into its manifest, it turned to the quiet spaceport of Vandenberg, where it launched 46 Falcon 9s, a new record.

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Varda Space Industries advances space-based manufacturing and hypersonic testing

Varda Space Industries Inc., which specializes in in-space pharmaceutical manufacturing and hypersonic reentry technologies, is expanding its research and applications across multiple sectors. With innovations in microgravity-based drug development and reusable reentry systems, the company integrates space-based manufacturing processes with scalable solutions for defense and industrial applications.

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Axiom Space revamps station assembly plans, targets 2028 for free-flying platform

Axiom Space announced a major revision to the assembly sequence for its Axiom Station, paving the way for it to operate as an independent orbital platform as early as 2028. This adjustment advances the timeline by approximately two years and appears to address both customer demands and national objectives, including NASA’s plans to retire the International Space Station by the end of the decade. 

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Artemis 2 crew provide a readiness update in front of their SLS Core Stage

On December 16, NASA hosted a select group of media representatives inside the Vehicle Assembly Building at Kennedy Space Center, Florida, for an exclusive briefing on the ambitious Artemis program. The event provided updates on mission preparations, challenges, and progress as NASA works toward its goal of returning humans to the Moon and landing at its South Pole.

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Post-ISS NASA might look very different than we expected

Next year we will pass the milestone of a quarter century of a continued human presence in space thanks to the International Space Station. Led by NASA’s efforts to lead in LEO, NASA plans to take the lead in the commercial space station market as well. However, NASA’s method might not be what we expect it to be.

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Terminal Count: Artemis 2 delayed to 2026 while SpaceX continues to break records

Liftoff of SLS for the Artemis 1 mission

It will be a quiet launch week with only two days seeing orbital launches from China, Japan, and of course, SpaceX. The biggest story of the last week was with NASA; it received a nomination for the next NASA Administrator, then the outgoing Administrator announced the delay of the Artemis 2 and 3 missions.

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Coalition for Deep Space Exploration supports Artemis schedule update

WASHINGTON, D.C. (Dec. 5) – The Coalition for Deep Space Exploration (CDSE) supports NASA’s announcement of a schedule update for the Artemis-II and Artemis-III missions providing the incoming administration a sound path forward for the program. CDSE shares NASA’s optimism for the future of Artemis and the excitement of returning to the Moon soon. The announced schedule adjustment recognizes the reality that as industry develops the complex pieces required to return humans to the Moon, the Artemis program will encounter both known and unknown challenges, and as they appear, industry is solving them. No company or development process is immune to obstacles when attempting great things, yet all must be held to a singular standard where crew safety remains the paramount priority.

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