Chinese Airlines Add Thousands of Europe Flights, Shrugging Off Iran War
Chinese airlines are planning to add thousands of new flights to European destinations over the next six months, capitalizing on the disruption caused by the Iran war. With permission to overfly Russian airspace, they can offer shorter routes and lower fuel consumption compared with European carriers forced onto longer detours. The additional capacity is expected to increase seat supply and intensify competition for airport slots in major hubs such as Frankfurt, Paris and London. Analysts see this move as a strategic push to capture market share while Western airlines grapple with higher jet‑fuel prices.
How American Airlines Makes Money
American Airlines reported $54.63 billion in operating revenue for fiscal 2025, a modest 0.8% increase year‑over‑year, while net income slipped to $111 million from $846 million. Passenger services remain the engine of the business, delivering $49.64 billion—about 91% of total revenue—while cargo contributed $839 million...

The End of the VSAT Parts Bin
Tactical VSAT systems are moving from a modular “parts‑bin” approach to fully integrated terminal‑modem‑interface platforms. The shift consolidates antennas, ruggedized outdoor modems and a single browser‑based control GUI, slashing deployment time and reducing field failures. Parabolic dishes still dominate high‑throughput...

Commission Okays Drone Regulation Reforms
Thailand's National Broadcasting and Telecommunications Commission (NBTC) approved four draft notifications on April 7 to broaden drone spectrum use, raise technical standards, and tighten operational oversight. The new rules replace visual‑line‑of‑sight limits with provisions for beyond‑visual‑line‑of‑sight (BVLOS) missions, logistics, surveillance and...
How to Watch the Artemis 2 Splashdown
NASA’s Artemis 2 crew—Commander Reid Wiseman, Pilot Victor Glover, Mission Specialist Christina Koch and CSA astronaut Jeremy Hansen—will conclude their historic lunar flyby with a splashdown near San Diego at 8:07 p.m. EDT on Friday. The Orion capsule will re‑enter at roughly 23,864 mph,...
April 9, 2026, Quick Space Links
The post curates a set of recent space‑industry highlights, from Stoke Space unveiling near‑complete photos of its Nova launch vehicle to Axiom marking four years since its inaugural private tourist flight to the ISS. It also shares a rehearsal image...

White House Budget Puts 54 NASA Science Missions on the Chopping Block
The White House’s FY 2027 budget proposal slashes NASA’s science program by 46%, reducing the agency’s total allocation to $18.8 billion. An analysis by The Planetary Society flags 54 major missions—including the Juno Jupiter probe, Venus explorers DAVINCI and VERITAS, and several...

Indoor Testing Facilities Available at the NASA Unmanned Autonomy Research Complex (NUARC)
NASA’s Unmanned Autonomy Research Complex (NUARC) now offers the WindShaper, a 9‑by‑7‑foot indoor fan array comprising 1,134 fans (567 wind pixels) that can produce wind speeds up to 16 m/s (36 mph) and rapid acceleration profiles. Researchers can program steady winds, gusts,...
How the Artemis Astronauts Are Protected From Dangerous Space Radiation
NASA is tackling the heightened radiation threat to Artemis 2 astronauts with a layered strategy that combines physical shielding, an on‑board “storm shelter,” and advanced space‑weather forecasting. Orion’s hull incorporates hydrogen‑rich materials such as water and plastics, while crew can reconfigure...
Network Integration Remains a Challenge in Pushing Data to the Tactical Edge
Commercial space firms are moving past bandwidth bottlenecks, thanks to multiple LEO constellations, and are now focused on integrating fragmented data architectures at the tactical edge. Amazon Leo highlighted its use of standard network protocols to extend the AWS cloud...
SkyShare Selected to Operate FBO and Develop Much Needed Hangar Capacity at South Valley Regional Airport
SkyShare has been chosen as the Fixed Base Operator for South Valley Regional Airport (SVR) near Salt Lake City. The company will manage the full‑service FBO and oversee roughly 650,000 sq ft of hangar and office space. To address a four‑year‑long hangar...

Q&A: How Lebanon’s Aviation Chief Keeps Beirut Airport Open Amid Iran War Chaos
Amid the US‑Israeli war on Iran, Beirut’s Rafic Hariri Airport remains operational despite daily Israeli strikes near the city. Captain Mohammed Aziz, head of Lebanon’s Civil Aviation Authority, says Middle East Airlines (MEA) is the sole carrier still flying, operating...

As Astronauts Visit the Moon, NASA Insider Says Agency Is in Shambles Behind the Scenes
Four NASA astronauts completed a lunar flyby, delivering striking images of Earth and the Moon’s far side. At the same time, the agency is grappling with a proposed 47% cut to its science directorate under the Trump administration’s 2026 budget...

On Final Approach: How the NC Supreme Court Case Can Ground Long-Tail Aviation Liability
The North Carolina Supreme Court in Warren v. Cielo Ventures upheld a one‑year contractual limitations period, rejecting the idea that statutory UDTPA claims automatically override contract terms. The decision rests on freedom‑of‑contract principles and prior case law, stating that parties...
House Set To Vote on ALERT Act Next Week
The U.S. House will vote next week on the Airspace Location and Enhanced Risk Transparency (ALERT) Act (H.R.7613) under suspension of the rules, requiring a two‑thirds majority. The bill expands on the earlier ROTOR Act by directing the FAA to...

Air Force May Miss Historic Budget Boom With Cautious Proposals, Expert Fears
The Pentagon’s FY2027 Air Force budget request adds roughly 22%—about $57 billion—to reach $317 billion, but many analysts say it falls short of the service’s long‑term modernization needs. Procurement plans call for only 62 new fighters, well below the 72‑jet annual target,...

New Wargame Assessed USAF Force Mixes for a China Fight
A new unclassified wargame organized by the AFA Mitchell Institute compared two future U.S. Air Force force mixes for a 2035 China‑Taiwan conflict. Team Doolittle reflects the current modernization path, while Team Mitchell models a more aggressive build‑up with additional...

Best Sources for News Related to Artemis Missions
Artemis mission followers should treat NASA’s official Artemis hub as the anchor for factual data while supplementing it with independent outlets and oversight reports. Reuters delivers timely coverage of budget, contract, and policy shifts, whereas GAO and the NASA Office...
Turkish Executive Airlines Has a New Chairman and a New CEO
Turkish Airlines announced a leadership overhaul, naming long‑time CFO Murat Şeker as chairman and internal commercial veteran Ahmet Olmuştur as chief executive officer. Şeker brings a track record of fiscal discipline and international financing experience, while Olmuştur adds deep expertise...

Copa Airlines Confirms Starlink Wifi Rollout Starting This Year
Copa Airlines announced it will equip its Boeing 737 fleet with Starlink satellite Wi‑Fi, becoming the first Latin American carrier to offer LEO‑based high‑speed connectivity. Installation begins this year with most flights expected to have service by October. The move...

Infleqtion and NASA Deploy Upgraded Quantum Hardware to International Space Station
Infleqtion, in partnership with NASA’s JPL, delivered an upgraded physics package to the International Space Station aboard the Northrop Grumman‑24 cargo flight. The new hardware enhances the Cold Atom Laboratory’s ability to generate record‑large atom clouds and reach ultracold temperatures in...

Space Force Awards Kratos $447 Million Contract for Missile Warning Tracking
The U.S. Space Force awarded Kratos Technology & Training Solutions a $447 million Other Transaction Agreement to build a ground‑management integration system for its missile‑warning satellites. The contract will initially support the 12‑satellite Epoch 1 constellation slated for launch in 2027‑28, followed...
Space Force Awards GPS Ground Contract Amid OCX Uncertainty
The U.S. Space Force awarded Lockheed Martin a $105 million contract to sustain and enhance its interim GPS ground system, known as the Architecture Evolution Plan (AEP). The funding adds capabilities for launch, early‑orbit and disposal operations of the upcoming GPS...

Travelers See Fewer Flights and Higher Airfares as Jet Fuel Prices Swing
Jet fuel prices have surged to about $209 per barrel, roughly double the level at the start of the war in the Middle East, prompting airlines to raise fares and ancillary fees. U.S. carriers such as Delta and United report...

Vancouver’s EarthDaily Analytics Secures Eight-Figure US Defence Contract
Vancouver‑based EarthDaily Analytics has landed an eight‑figure (roughly $10‑99 million) data‑subscription deal with an undisclosed U.S. defence and intelligence technology firm. The contract provides daily, AI‑ready satellite imagery covering tens of millions of square kilometres, sourced from the upcoming EarthDaily Constellation....
European Union to Restructure Its Space Bureaucracy
The European Commission announced that the European Union Agency for the Space Programme will be renamed the European Union Space Services Agency (EUSPA). The rebranded agency will take charge of operating Galileo, upcoming communications constellations, and security‑focused satellite projects from...

This Week in PowerBites: Amateur Physicist Exploits, “Electric” Airshows, and SiC/GaN Advances
The latest PowerBites issue spotlights a surge of electric‑propulsion demonstrations at Sun ’N Fun and Flite Fest, underscoring the rapid maturation of fossil‑free aviation. An amateur physicist’s DIY rig, built from 28,000 lb of car batteries and copper, produced discharges that...

Advanced Solar Power Systems for Satellites in 2026
In January 2026 NASA’s Gateway Power and Propulsion Element successfully started a roll‑out solar array capable of 60 kW, underscoring the shift from traditional rigid wings to high‑power, low‑mass deployable systems. Multi‑junction III‑V cells remain the efficiency benchmark, delivering over 32 % conversion...

Global Policies Governing Earth Observation Applications
Global earth‑observation (EO) policies are diverging as the United States clings to a Cold‑War‑era licensing regime, while the EU’s Copernicus programme champions free, open‑access data. China’s data‑sovereignty laws tightly control geospatial exports, and India’s 2023 space policy opens the market...
Delta Air Lines Signals Permanently Higher Fares, Fewer Flights, And A New Wave Of Airline Mergers
Delta Air Lines used its Q1 2026 earnings call to signal that higher ticket prices will likely persist, even if jet fuel costs ease. The carrier plans to trim off‑peak capacity, focusing on more profitable routes and premium cabins to...
ESA Paid Arianespace About $96 Million for an Ariane-6 Launch
The European Space Agency has paid Arianespace €82 million (about $96 million) to launch the Sentinel‑1D Earth‑observation satellite on an Ariane‑62 rocket in November 2025. This is the first public disclosure of an Ariane‑6 launch price, positioning the vehicle against SpaceX’s Falcon 9, which...

TRAI Floats Satellite Spectrum Framework, Seeks Industry Views on Direct-to-Mobile Services
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) released a consultation paper proposing a Satellite Communication Network framework that would permit Direct‑to‑Device (D2D) satellite services using either Mobile Satellite Service (MSS) or International Mobile Telecommunications (IMT) spectrum. The initiative aims to...

TJ Green LLC Announces 29th Annual CMSE Conference & Exhibition
The 29th annual Components for Military & Space Electronics (CMSE) conference will take place April 28‑30, 2026 at the Renaissance Los Angeles Airport Hotel, featuring over 35 high‑reliability component suppliers. The program highlights keynote addresses from IBM Research, the Defense...

Is Space Exploration Worth the Money and Effort? | Letters
The Guardian published a letters page reacting to Zoe Williams’s claim that the U.S. space race is wasteful. Critics highlight the Artemis program’s roughly $100 billion price tag, arguing it could fund the UN World Food Programme for a decade. Supporters counter...

Artemis 2 Crew Discusses Spaceflight Risks and Canadian Collaboration with Prime Minister Mark Carney
On Flight Day 8 of NASA’s Artemis 2 mission, the Orion crew held a live dialogue with the Canadian Space Agency, Prime Minister Mark Carney, Industry Minister Mélanie Joly, and students across Canada. Canadian astronaut Colonel Jeremy Hansen, the first CSA member aboard Artemis 2,...
Saxavord Spaceport Lost About $7 Million in Both ’23 and ’24; Andoya Launch Scheduled for Today
Saxavord spaceport on the Shetland Islands reported a pre‑tax loss of about $7.25 million in both 2023 and 2024, even as revenue rose 32 percent to £2.5 million (≈$3.2 million). The losses are tied to prolonged licensing delays by the UK Civil Aviation Authority,...

PAL Resumes Flights to Riyadh
Philippine Airlines (PAL) announced today that it will resume daily nonstop flights between Manila and Riyadh, becoming the first Philippine carrier to restore service to the Middle East after a weeks‑long suspension triggered by the Feb. 28 US‑Israel attacks on Iran....

Early Warning Aircraft From the USA for Poland?
Poland’s air force has adopted the Saab 340B AEW‑300 as a temporary early‑warning platform, but officials stress it only bridges the capability gap until 2030. The United States, via L3Harris, is promoting its AERIS AEW system, mounted on Gulfstream G550 and Bombardier Global 6500 business...

SmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Daniel Bock, Morpheus Space
Morpheus Space, founded by TU Dresden researchers, commercialized NanoFEEP electric propulsion for CubeSats and larger platforms. After an in‑orbit qualification in February 2019, the startup raised a diverse 2020 round led by Vsquared Ventures with investors such as Airbus Ventures and...
Starlink Clears Security Hurdle, DCC Nod Likely Next Week
Starlink has satisfied India’s law‑enforcement security requirements, clearing the biggest regulatory hurdle for its commercial launch. The Digital Communications Commission is slated to meet next week, after which the proposal will move to the Union Cabinet for final approval. Executives...

British Airways Drops Key Middle East Route and Cuts Flights From Heathrow to Dubai, Doha and Tel Aviv
British Airways will cancel its Heathrow‑Jeddah service on 24 April and restart flights to Dubai, Doha and Tel Aviv in July, but at a fraction of the pre‑war frequency. The airline also halves its daily Riyadh link when it returns in...

Firefly Aerospace Prepares for Blue Ghost Mission 2 Following Historic Lunar Success
Firefly Aerospace announced accelerated assembly and testing for Blue Ghost Mission 2, its second lunar delivery slated for no earlier than late 2026 on a SpaceX Falcon 9. The mission follows the historic March 2025 soft‑landing of Mission 1, the first commercial spacecraft to touch...

What’s Happening with Airlines and Airports in the Gulf Right Now?
Cirium data shows Gulf hub capacity remains sharply reduced despite falling cancellation rates, indicating a structural adjustment after the conflict began. In the second half of April, scheduled capacity at Dubai (DXB) and Doha (DOH) fell about 50% year‑on‑year, while...

Delta No Longer Contesting PAL’s Bid to Fly to Chicago
Philippine Airlines (PAL) is poised to launch a Manila‑Chicago nonstop after Delta Air Lines formally withdrew its objection to the route. Delta’s filing with the U.S. Department of Transportation requests that any approval be limited to a one‑year exemption, allowing...

U.S. Startup Aeon Prepares Revolution in Tactical Missiles
U.S. defense startup Aeon unveiled Zeus, a software‑defined guided missile priced around $50,000 per unit and designed for mass production of over 10,000 missiles annually. The system combines modular hardware with Aeon’s ODIN targeting software, enabling rapid sensor swaps and...

Lockheed Martin Outlines Strategic Space Technology Roadmap for 2026
Lockheed Martin released a 2026 space technology roadmap that emphasizes proliferated satellite constellations, high‑rate small‑sat production, and advanced defense payloads. The company’s Small Satellite Processing & Delivery Center can build up to 180 spacecraft annually, supporting the launch of 18...
Russia’s Latest Plans for Its Post-ISS Space Station
Russia’s Roscosmos unveiled a roadmap to transition from the International Space Station to a standalone Russian Orbital Station (ROS). The plan calls for attaching a new module to the ISS, then in 2030 detaching it along with the Prichal and...
H55 Delivers Certifiable Battery Modules to BRM Aero for Electric Aircraft Trainer Program
H55 has delivered certifiable battery modules to BRM Aero for its electric trainer, the Bristell B23 Energic. The modules meet aviation certification standards, allowing the program to move into mechanical integration and aircraft‑level validation. First aircraft deliveries are planned for...
Augment Aero: Automated Airside Assistance
Augment Aero, founded in 2023 by former aerospace recruiter Elaine Harding, is developing AI‑driven augmented‑reality glasses to automate aircraft‑engineer admin tasks. The startup secured a £1.2 million ($1.5 million) UK grant and later attracted private investment after highlighting Boeing’s £1 billion ($1.27 billion) cap‑table...

All Operational, Underdevelopment, or Planned Human Crewed Space Capsules
In April 2026 Orion’s Artemis II carried four astronauts beyond low‑Earth orbit, confirming that crew capsules now serve lunar missions as well as orbital ferry work. The active capsule fleet includes SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, Russia’s Soyuz MS, China’s Shenzhou, NASA’s Orion, and Blue Origin’s...