Europe's Ariane 6 rocket puts EU navigation satellites in orbit

BSS
Published On: 17 Dec 2025, 18:11

KOUROU, Dec 17, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - Europe's new Ariane 6 rocket successfully 
placed two satellites into orbit to join the EU's rival to the GPS navigation 
system on Wednesday after the mission blasted off from French Guiana.

It was the fourth commercial mission of the Ariane 6 launch system since the 
long-delayed single-use rockets came into service last year.

The rocket launched into cloudy skies from Europe's spaceport in Kourou on 
the northeastern coast of South America at 2:01 am local time (0501 GMT).

It was carrying two more satellites of the European Union's Galileo 
programme, a global navigation satellite system that aims to make the bloc 
less dependent on the US's Global Positioning System (GPS).

Applause rang out at the spaceport minutes before 7:00 am local time (1000 
GMT) as it was confirmed that the satellites had been successfully deployed 
into orbit 23, 000 kilometres (14,000 miles) above Earth's surface.

They will bring to 34 the number of Galileo satellites in orbit.

This addition will also "improve the robustness of the Galileo system by 
adding spares to the constellation to guarantee the system can provide 24/7 
navigation to billions of users", according to the European Space Agency 
(ESA) which oversees the programme.

According to the EU, Galileo is four times more accurate than GPS, providing 
navigation accuracy of up to one metre.

The "successful" launch also reinforces "Europe's resilience and autonomy in 
space", the ESA said on X.

- Reusable rockets wanted -

Previous Galileo satellites were primarily launched by Ariane 5 and Russian 
Soyuz rockets from Kourou.

After Russia's invasion of Ukraine, Europe halted space cooperation with 
Moscow.

The loss of Russia's Soyuz rockets -- and repeated delays to Ariane 6 -- left 
Europe without an independent way to blast missions into space for several 
months.

Before Ariane 6's first commercial flight in March this year, the ESA 
resorted to contracting billionaire Elon Musk's SpaceX to launch two Galileo 
satellites in September 2024.

Ariane 6 also blasted a weather satellite into orbit in August followed by a 
satellite for the EU's observation programme Copernicus last month.

Arianespace, the operator of the rocket system, in September reduced by one 
the number of commercial launches on Ariane 6 this year, vowing to roughly 
double its number of missions in 2026.

The next mission, planned for the first quarter of 2026, will be the first to 
use a four-booster version of Ariane 6, rather than the current two.

It is scheduled to launch 34 satellites for the constellation of billionaire 
Jeff Bezos's Amazon. The constellation, formerly known as Project Kuiper, was 
recently renamed Amazon Leo.

SpaceX has risen to dominate the booming commercial launch industry by 
developing rockets that are reusable -- which Ariane 6 is not.

"We have to really catch up and make sure that we come to the market with a 
reusable launcher relatively fast," ESA director Josef Aschbacher told AFP in 
October.

Several European aerospace firms are now bidding to develop the system for 
the ESA.

 

  • Latest
  • Most Viewed
ACC files cases against 86 UCB’s ex-officers on misappropriation charges
Doa-mahfil held in Barguna for Khaleda Zia’s recovery
KU students to get fully funded higher study opportunity at Japan university 
Security will be provided on candidates’ applications: KMP commissioner
Navy arrests 23 with two boats smuggling to Myanmar
Bangladesh intensifies legal efforts to recover laundered money from abroad: BB Governor
Court discharges Mirza Abbas, Aman, 43 others in 2 cases
India's Bivor Adak takes solo lead
Sangram Handball SC emerge champions
Dhaka rejects Indian advice on election process: Touhid
১০