SpaceX Launches Satellites From California, Florida Day After Scrubs
CAPE CANAVERAL SPACE FORCE STATION, FLORIDA, JUL 22 – SpaceX postponed the launch of two SES O3b mPOWER satellites seconds before liftoff and plans to attempt again Tuesday, marking its 15th mission with SES since 2013.
- In 2024, SpaceX conducted more launches than all other space-faring nations combined, with Falcon 9 rockets reused multiple times to cut costs.
- Amid cost pressures, SpaceX harnessed reusable rocket technology to cut launch costs and disrupt traditional markets.
- Beyond launch volume, SpaceX provides near-instant orbital launches critical for defense and communication networks.
- Industry-Wide, traditional aerospace firms are investing in new reusable technologies to catch up, prompting competitors and governments to overhaul strategies.
- As SpaceX advances, Starship’s full reusability positions it for interplanetary missions, potentially turning Mars travel into realism.
21 Articles
21 Articles
SpaceX sends up satellites on 2nd launch attempt from Cape Canaveral
SpaceX got to within 15 seconds of a launch from Cape Canaveral on Monday, but a "hold, hold, hold" call from among the mission control team members forced an abort. They were back for another try on Tuesday and pulled it off.


SES's Ninth and Tenth O3b mPOWER Satellites Successfully Launched
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. -- The latest pair of O3b mPOWER satellites was successfully launched into space by a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida, United States, at 5:12 pm local time, SES announced today. These two new satellites enhance global coverage and bring incremental capacity to scale up services provided by SES’s second-generation medium Earth orbit (MEO) system, O3b mPOWER.
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