After Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket stuck its landing last week, founder Jeff Bezos took to social media to explain why the booster didn't actually land directly on target—and why that's entirely by design.
The Safety Buffer Strategy
On Friday, the Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN) founder shared video footage of the New Glenn booster touching down on the Jacklyn landing platform off Florida's coast. The reveal? Blue Origin intentionally targets a landing spot "a few hundred feet away from Jacklyn to avoid a severe impact if engines fail to start or start slowly," Bezos explained.
It's basically an insurance policy. If something goes wrong during the final descent, you'd rather miss the expensive landing platform than crash directly into it. Bezos noted that as New Glenn's development matures and the team gains confidence, Blue Origin will dial back this "conservatism" and aim for more precise landings.
What's Next for New Glenn and the Space Race
Before last week's mission, Blue Origin unveiled a new booster stage for New Glenn that will play a key role in NASA's ESCAPADE mission—short for Escape and Plasma Acceleration Dynamics Explorers. That mission will study how Mars interacts with solar winds, adding scientific credibility to New Glenn's capabilities.
Meanwhile, SpaceX released an accelerated timeline for its Starship rocket and lunar mission, a critical component of NASA's Artemis moon program. The announcement came after Transportation Secretary and then Interim NASA Administrator Sean Duffy suggested potentially opening up bidding to SpaceX's competitors.