
China’s International Capacity Growth: Part Two – Trends Differ Widely in Specific Markets
China’s international airline capacity has rebounded to roughly 90% of its pre‑pandemic level, yet the recovery is uneven across key markets. Routes to Japan, Vietnam, Australia and Thailand are approaching 70‑80% of 2019 volumes, while the US‑China corridor lags at about 25% due to strict flight‑slot caps. Mainland Chinese carriers are expanding capacity faster than overseas airlines on several routes, reflecting divergent regulatory and commercial pressures. Economic headwinds are also shifting Chinese leisure travelers toward domestic destinations.
Iran’s Underground Air Force Base Had Been Hit Earlier in the War
Satellite images released by The New York Times show that Iran’s Eagle 44 underground Air Force base in Hormozgan province was hit by air strikes at the end of March. The strikes created craters at tunnel entrances and damaged taxiways, effectively sealing the...
Cathay Pacific to Cut Flights From Mid-May to End-June as Jet Fuel Prices Surge
Cathay Pacific announced it will cancel roughly 2% of its scheduled passenger flights from May 16 to June 30, 2026, citing a sharp rise in jet‑fuel costs linked to the Middle‑East conflict. Its low‑cost subsidiary HK Express will trim about...
Zero-Emission Drone News From Ukraine: Flying Fuel Cells & Green Hydrogen
Ukraine’s drone maker Skyeton has moved its Raybird reconnaissance UAV from gasoline power to a hydrogen‑fuel‑cell hybrid, achieving combat‑ready flights of over 10 hours. The hybrid system operates across a –35 °C to +55 °C temperature span, matching the internal‑combustion version while...

China Accelerates Orbital Internet Deployment with Successful Smart Dragon-3 Sea Launch
China’s Smart Dragon‑3 carrier rocket lifted off from a sea‑based platform off Guangdong on April 11, delivering a test payload for its sovereign low‑Earth‑orbit internet network. The four‑stage solid‑propellant vehicle, now on its 11th successful flight, can place up to 1,500 kg...

The New Normal? Spanish Airline Imposes Fuel Surcharge On Already-Paid Tickets
Volotea has begun charging an $8‑$11 fuel surcharge on tickets that were already paid in full, invoking a booking clause for “extraordinary fuel‑cost shocks.” The move follows a sharp rise in jet‑fuel prices tied to renewed Middle East tensions, highlighting...

Smallsats Dominate 2025 Launch Landscape as Mass Efficiency Peaks
In 2025, smallsats—satellites under 1,200 kg—accounted for 98% of all launches, marking a decisive industry shift. The second quarter saw 1,198 spacecraft lifted, with smallsats delivering 87% of the 743,770 kg upmass, while the third quarter maintained a 98% share despite a...

MIT STAR Lab Expands Scope From Lasercom Innovation to Space Policy Architecture
MIT’s Space Telecommunications, Astronomy and Radiation (STAR) Lab is broadening its focus from pure hardware innovation to a hybrid of high‑performance CubeSat technology and emerging space‑policy frameworks. Under Professor Kerri Cahoy, the lab is integrating astrophysics research, such as exoplanet...
Starlink Speed in Asia Pacific: Growth, Regulation, Pricing and Performance Trends
Starlink now serves over 10 million subscribers in 155 countries, capturing 97.1% of global satellite Speedtest samples in Q3 2025. In Asia‑Pacific, Oceania leads with median download speeds of 162 Mbps and 35 ms latency, while Southeast Asian markets show mixed results—Malaysia up to...
Air Seychelles Charts New Routes Around Conflict Zones, Recasting Travel to the One Big Wow
Air Seychelles is launching nonstop flights to Paris, Rome and a planned Istanbul link, deliberately bypassing Gulf hubs that are constrained by Middle East airspace conflicts. The carrier is wet‑leasing aircraft to quickly add long‑haul capacity, preserving the tourism lifeline...
Missile Kit Lets Fighter Jets Down Drones on the Cheap
BAE Systems demonstrated that its Advanced Precision Kill Weapon System (APKWS) kit can turn a 70‑mm unguided rocket into a laser‑guided missile for roughly US $25,000 per shot when launched from an RAF Typhoon. The test, conducted at Warton, showed the...
JAXA Plans to Bring Back Pristine Early Solar System Samples From a Comet
Japan’s space agency JAXA has outlined the Next Generation Small‑Body Return (NGSR), a large‑class mission to retrieve pristine material from comet 289P/Blanpain. The 2034 launch will send a lander that will impact the comet’s surface, collect subsurface ice and dust,...
American Bets Billions On Miami And DFW
American Airlines is allocating roughly $5 billion to simultaneous hub upgrades at Miami International Airport and Dallas‑Fort Worth International Airport. The Miami project adds a $1 billion Concourse D expansion with 17 new gates for larger aircraft, slated for completion in 2030, while...

The Aircraft Set To Replace The World’s Largest Commercial Jet
The aviation industry is moving away from four‑engine giants toward large twin‑engine jets, with Boeing’s 777X positioned as the successor to the Airbus A380 and Boeing 747. The 777X will be the world’s longest commercial aircraft at 76.7 m and can...
Untitled
On April 6, 2026, NASA’s Artemis II mission performed a historic lunar flyby, the first since Apollo 17 in 1972. The Orion spacecraft rounded the Moon’s far side, reaching a peak distance of roughly 407,000 km—making it the farthest humans have traveled from Earth...

Virgin Atlantic's Airbus A350 Upgrade To San Francisco Vs. Boeing 787 Downgrade To Los Angeles: The Cabin Differences That Matter
Virgin Atlantic will launch its 335‑seat Airbus A350‑1000 on the San Francisco‑London route on May 16, 2026, offering the airline’s flagship Upper Class suite to a high‑yield tech market. The Los Angeles‑London service will instead shift to a Boeing 787‑9, a step down in...

UK’s SatVu Expands Thermal “Eyes in the Sky” With HotSat‑2 Launch
SatVu, a UK‑based space data firm, launched HotSat‑2 on SpaceX’s Transporter‑16 rideshare from Vandenberg. The satellite carries mid‑wave infrared sensors that deliver high‑resolution thermal imagery capable of seeing heat signatures through roofs and other structures. HotSat‑2’s data is positioned for...

Epic, Must-Watch 4K Footage of the Artemis II Launch
NASA’s Space Launch System lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on April 1, 2026, carrying the Orion spacecraft named Integrity on a ten‑day lunar flyby. The Artemis II mission marks the first crewed flight beyond low‑Earth orbit since Apollo 17 and the inaugural crewed...

What Lit up the Night Sky? PhilSA Explains Strange Glow Seen over PH
On April 11, a luminous “space jellyfish” lit up the Philippine night sky, which the Philippine Space Agency (PhilSA) attributes to the Chinese Jielong‑3 rocket launched minutes earlier from the South China Sea. The high‑altitude exhaust plume reflected sunlight, creating a...

Carriers Cut Flights on Cost Pressures, Uncertain Demand
Indian airlines are trimming capacity to Bangladesh, Nepal and Thailand as jet‑fuel costs surge and leisure demand wanes. Air India and IndiGo have cut Dhaka services, while Air India Express eliminated its Kathmandu‑Bengaluru link and reduced Surat‑Bangkok flights. Fuel surcharges...

Rocket Lab’s iQPS Deal Hits 15 Missions: What Repeat Customers Tell Us About the Small Launch Market
Rocket Lab has added three more Electron launches for Japanese radar operator iQPS, bringing the partnership to 15 dedicated missions. The deal underscores a shift in the small‑launch market from one‑off sales to recurring revenue streams. At roughly $7.5 million per...
Meet Orpheus—A Hopper Mission Built to Hunt for Life in Martian Volcanoes
Researchers at the SETI Institute have proposed Orpheus, a vertical take‑off and landing (VTOL) hopper designed to explore the volcanic fissures, pits, and vents of Mars’s Cerberus Fossae region. Targeting the young volcanic deposits and a specific vent (Vent #5)...
April 12, 1981: Columbia Lifts of for the First Space Shuttle Mission
On April 12, 1981, NASA’s Space Shuttle Columbia lifted off on STS‑1, the inaugural flight of the United States’ reusable spacecraft program. Piloted by John Young and Robert Crippen, the two‑day mission demonstrated successful launch, orbit, and safe return, validating...

Launch Services Procurement: How Buyers Choose Rockets, Rideshares, and Mission Assurance Partners
Launch procurement is evolving from a price‑centric exercise to a risk‑allocation strategy that prioritizes schedule certainty, mission assurance, and integration fit. Buyers start with mission constraints—orbit, timing, payload value—and then evaluate rockets, rideshares, or dedicated services based on how each...

Aer Lingus Introduces Starlink-Powered High-Speed Onboard WiFi to Transform Digital Passenger Experience
Aer Lingus has equipped its first aircraft with SpaceX’s Starlink satellite system, delivering onboard Wi‑Fi speeds exceeding 500 Mbps. The airline will begin the rollout on North America routes, expanding to European long‑haul flights, with the entire fleet expected to be...

Hah: Spanish Airline Volotea Charges For Fuel After You Book Your Ticket
Spanish low‑cost carrier Volotea introduced a “Fair Travel Promise” that lets it adjust ticket prices up to €9 (about $9.80) per flight seven days before departure to reflect real‑time fuel costs. The surcharge is applied only if oil prices rise,...

5G From the Sky: New Internet Infrastructure Takes Flight
Sceye has finished a 12‑day endurance test of its high‑altitude platform system (HAPS), a helium‑filled balloon that operates in the stratosphere. The test gathered degradation data to refine the design before commercial flights that will target specific ground areas with...

TAP Air Portugal Introduces Economy Prime to Elevate Long-Haul Passenger Experience
TAP Air Portugal is launching Economy Prime, a new long‑haul cabin that sits between standard Economy and Business Class. The product adds 12 seats behind Business Class on A330 and A321LR aircraft, with the side seat left empty to create...

Rocket Lab Wins Contract for Three More iQPS Launches
Rocket Lab announced a new contract with Japan’s iQPS to launch three more Electron missions beginning in 2028. The agreement adds to an existing pipeline that already includes seven completed iQPS flights and five launches on order. Each Electron flight...
American Airlines, Google Reduce Contrails By 62%
American Airlines integrated Google’s AI‑driven contrail‑avoidance forecasts into its flight‑planning system for 2,400 transatlantic flights, achieving a 62% reduction in persistent contrail formation versus a control group. The tool combines satellite imagery, weather models and flight data to map atmospheric...

U.S. C-130J Super Hercules Faces Challenge From China’s Y-30 Aircraft with Superior Payload & Tech Claims
Lockheed Martin’s C‑130J Super Hercules, in service since 1999 with over 560 deliveries, has long been the benchmark tactical airlifter. Chinese media claim the newly‑tested Y‑30 (or Y‑15) can out‑perform the C‑130J, offering a 30‑tonne payload, higher‑power AEP‑500 engines and...

Ukrainian Patriot Crews Downing Ballistic Missiles with Single Interceptor
Ukrainian Patriot crews have begun intercepting ballistic missiles with a single PAC‑2 or PAC‑3 interceptor, deviating from NATO doctrine that normally calls for two to four missiles per engagement. The claim, voiced by an Air Command West commander and supported...

Lufthansa Pilot Strike Will Largely Ground Airline For Two Days (Again)
Lufthansa, marking its 100th anniversary, faces a second pilot walkout in a month as the Vereinigung Cockpit union calls a two‑day strike from April 13‑14, 2026, covering Lufthansa mainline, CityLine, and Cargo pilots. Eurowings pilots will strike on April 13...
How Air Astana’s Sleeper Seats Could Redefine Economy Travel
Air Astana has launched an “Economy Sleeper” that converts a row of three economy seats into a flat sleeping surface with a mattress topper, pillow and blanket. The service offers a low‑cost alternative to premium cabins by monetising otherwise idle seat...

Japan Buys Drones to Replace Apache Fleet
Japan’s FY2026 defense budget has set aside ¥11.1 billion (about $70 million) to buy five wide‑area UAVs for the Ground Self‑Defense Force, marking the first funded step toward replacing its AH‑64D Apache attack helicopters. The Turkish‑made Bayraktar TB2S and Israel’s Heron Mk II have both...

Russian FrankenSAM Launcher Spotted Near Ukrainian Border
A Russian improvised ground launcher dubbed “FrankenSAM,” fitted with four R‑77 air‑to‑air missiles, was photographed in Oryol, roughly 100 miles from the Ukrainian border. Vympel data indicates a ground‑launched R‑77 can engage targets between 1.2 km and 12 km away, reaching altitudes of...
Qantas Plane that Can Leapfrog Middle East Rolls Off Assembly Line
Qantas’ Project Sunrise has taken delivery of its first Airbus A350‑1000 ULR, rolling off the Toulouse assembly line and entering a two‑month flight‑testing program. The ultra‑long‑range aircraft can fly up to 22 hours nonstop, thanks to an extra 20,000‑litre rear‑centre...

Victor Glover's First Words After Returning From the Moon Will Tug At Your Heart
NASA astronaut Victor Glover delivered an emotional address after the Artemis II crew splashed down, thanking God and his five daughters before speaking to the broader public. The Artemis II mission marked a ten‑day, crewed test flight that looped around the Moon—the...

Lufthansa Crew Strike Set to Cancel More Than 500 Flights
Germany’s largest airline, Lufthansa, faced a one‑day cabin‑crew strike on Friday after the UFO union called its members at both the main carrier and regional Lufthansa CityLine to walk out. The action is expected to cancel more than 520 flights,...

A History of Space Debris Impacts on the ISS and ISS Conjunction Avoidance Actions
Since its launch, the International Space Station has endured a continuous barrage of orbital debris, with tiny, untracked particles responsible for the majority of documented hardware damage. While NASA conducts collision‑avoidance burns when the calculated risk exceeds a 1 in 10,000...

Why The Airbus A350 Is Becoming The Go-To Aircraft For Ultra-Long-Haul Routes
The Airbus A350 family, especially the 900ULR variant, is emerging as the preferred platform for ultra‑long‑haul routes, offering up to 19‑hour nonstop capability. Advanced composite construction, Rolls‑Royce Trent XWB engines, and optimized aerodynamics deliver roughly 25% lower fuel burn versus older...

Taiwan Spots China Warplanes Amid Cheng-Xi Meet
Taiwan’s Ministry of National Defense reported 16 Chinese warplanes operating near the island on Friday, coinciding with President Xi Jinping’s meeting with Kuomintang chairwoman Cheng Li‑wun in Beijing. Xi reiterated that Taiwan independence would not be tolerated, while Cheng framed...

NRL to Showcase Sovereign Space Capabilities at 41st Space Symposium
At the 41st Space Symposium, the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory will unveil a suite of technologies aimed at bolstering space domain awareness and autonomous orbital infrastructure. The lab recently launched three experimental payloads—LARADO, GOSAS, and GARI‑1C—on the STP‑S29A mission, showcasing...

Why Avelo Airlines Scrapped All International Flights
Avelo Airlines terminated its last international flights in January 2026, ending service to Cancun, Montego Bay and Punta Cana. The carrier is refocusing on domestic routes, consolidating operations around five core bases with a new hub slated for Dallas/McKinney. It...

The New Baggage Policy Changes That Delta Air Lines Passengers Should Know About In 2026
Delta Air Lines' 2026 baggage policy tightens fees and timelines while preserving free carry‑on allowances for all passengers, including Basic Economy. Checked‑bag charges rise to $35 for the first bag and $45 for the second, with weight limits of 50 lb...

Air France Flight Aborts Takeoff At LAX After Gulfstream Enters Runway Without Permission
Air France flight AF25 aborted its takeoff at LAX after an unauthorized Gulfstream jet entered runway 24L without clearance. The Boeing 777‑300ER slowed, decelerated, and later re‑attempted departure, reaching Paris without incident. The Gulfstream ignored a hold‑short instruction, prompting runway warning...

How Satellite Communications Support Aviation, Maritime, and Defense Customers
Satellite communications have become essential for aviation, maritime and defense users that operate beyond the reach of terrestrial networks. Providers such as SES, Viasat and Inmarsat are shifting from pure bandwidth sales to offering continuity, coverage and secure, mission‑critical links....

The New Market for Dual-Use Space Technology
Dual‑use space technology is emerging as a major market as governments seek commercial speed and firms pursue diversified demand. NASA’s FY 2026 performance plan and the U.S. Space Force Commercial Space Strategy embed commercial capabilities into defense and civil missions, turning...

Why Did Delta Air Lines Operate The Boeing 747 Again After An 18-Year Break?
Delta Air Lines revived the Boeing 747 in 2008, 18 years after its first retirement, by inheriting 16 747‑400s from the Northwest merger. The jumbo jets filled a capacity gap on high‑density trans‑Pacific routes while Delta awaited deliveries of Airbus A350‑900s and...

Lunar Communications, Navigation, and Power as Commercial Infrastructure Markets
Lunar communications, navigation, and power are evolving from mission‑specific support into early commercial infrastructure markets as NASA’s Artemis, CLPS, and Ignition programs demand continuous services. Private firms like Intuitive Machines, KSAT, and Nokia are already prototyping relay satellites and surface...