Ariane 6 Inaugural Launch
Targeted For 9 July
The first launch of Ariane 6 is
targeted for 9 July 2024 from Europe’s Spaceport in
French Guiana, ESA Director General Josef Aschbacher
announced at the ILA Berlin Air Show today.
Ariane 6 is Europe’s new heavy
lift launch vehicle replacing its extremely
successful predecessor, Ariane 5. Modular and agile,
Ariane 6 has a reignitable upper stage allowing it
to launch multiple missions on different orbits on a
single flight.
ESA Director General Josef
Aschbacher said: “Ariane 6 marks a new era of
autonomous, versatile European space travel. This
powerful rocket is the culmination of many years of
dedication and ingenuity from thousands across
Europe and, as it launches, it will re-establish
Europe’s independent access to space. I am glad to
announce that the first launch attempt will be on 9
July. I would like to thank the teams on the ground
for their tireless hard work, teamwork and
dedication in this last stretch of the inaugural
launch campaign. Ariane 6 is Europe’s rocket for the
needs of today, adaptable to our future ambitions.”
For the development of Ariane
6, ESA is the Launch System Architect working with
prime contractor ArianeGroup for the development of
the launch vehicle and with CNES for the development
of the ground segment. ESA is the operator
responsible for the inaugural flight while for
subsequent flights Arianespace is the launch service
provider that markets and operates the Ariane 6
launcher for institutional and commercial customers
to launch a variety of missions into orbit.
“The announcement of the
scheduled date for Ariane 6’s first flight puts us
on the home stretch of the launch campaign and we
are fully engaged in completing the very last steps.
This flight will mark the culmination of years of
development and testing by the teams at ArianeGroup
and its partners across Europe. It will pave the way
for commercial operations and a significant ramp-up
over the next two years. Ariane 6 is a powerful,
versatile and scalable launcher that will ensure
Europe’s autonomous access to space,” said Martin
Sion, CEO of ArianeGroup.
“Once again, the announcement
of the inaugural flight date of Ariane 6 from the
Guiana Space Center is a crucial step towards
European sovereignty in terms of access to space.
Reaching this date was made possible thanks to the
colossal efforts of all entities in the home
stretch. I would like to pay tribute the collective
achievement of overcoming the pitfalls over the
months. Now to the final adjustments before launch.
Europe in space is ready for take-off: we're
all united behind Ariane 6!” exclaimed Philippe
Baptiste, CEO of CNES.
“With 30 missions in our order
book, Ariane 6 has already gained the trust of
institutional and commercial customers. We are
preparing to make Ariane 6’s second launch by the
end of the year, followed by a steady rise to around
ten launches a year once we reach cruising speed. It
represents a splendid challenge for Arianespace and
our partners”,added Stéphane Israël, CEO of
Arianespace.
At Europe’s Spaceport in French
Guiana, many and varied payloads have been
integrated on Ariane 6’s payload carrier.
The last major milestone before launch is the
wet dress rehearsal. Once this activity has been
completed, the Ariane 6 Task Force will provide a
joint update on the inaugural flight.
|