Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Spacex Starship Test Ends In Explosion, Raises Questions About Rocket's Future


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) SpaceX's biggest rocket, Starship, exploded during a safety test at its Texas site on June 18, 2025. The company and local police confirmed that nobody was hurt. The blast happened while engineers loaded fuel and checked the rocket's systems.

The explosion destroyed the rocket and sent a fireball into the night sky. SpaceX quickly secured the area and worked with local emergency teams to keep everyone safe.

SpaceX's founder, Elon Musk, said a special nitrogen tank inside the rocket likely failed. This tank, called an overwrapped pressure vessel, has not caused problems like this before. SpaceX and safety officials are now investigating exactly what went wrong.

This is the fourth time Starship has failed in 2025. Earlier this year, two rockets exploded in flight, and another spun out of control and crashed into the ocean. Each time, SpaceX followed safety rules and reported no injuries.

The U.S. Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) checks every incident and tells SpaceX what needs fixing before more tests. Starship is the tallest and most powerful rocket ever built, standing 122 meters high.



SpaceX designed it to carry up to 150 metric tons of cargo or up to 100 people. The company wants to use Starship for trips to the Moon, Mars, and for moving satellites or cargo around Earth.

SpaceX says Starship could make launches much cheaper and faster than today's rockets. However, these failures mean delays and higher costs. Each explosion forces SpaceX to stop and fix problems before moving forward.

These setbacks also slow down plans for commercial flights and missions for NASA and other customers. The Starship program matters because it could change how the world does business in space.

If SpaceX solves these issues, it could lead the global market for launching heavy cargo and people. For now, the company must prove it can make Starship safe and reliable.

This story shows how hard it is to build new space technology. Every test, even when it fails, teaches engineers something new. The future of space travel depends on solving these tough problems step by step.

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The Rio Times

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