
Sharjah’s Satellite Infrastructure Still Intact After Missile Attack: Space42
On April 7, 2026, a missile struck the administrative building of Thuraya Telecommunications in Sharjah. Space42, Thuraya’s parent, confirmed that satellite services and infrastructure remain fully operational. The attack injured two Pakistani nationals, but no disruption to customers was reported. Authorities attribute the missile to Iran.
Maple Syrup or Nutella? PM Carney Calls Canadian Artemis Astronaut
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney held an Earth‑to‑space call with astronaut Jeremy Hansen, a crew member of NASA’s Artemis II mission and the first non‑American to orbit the Moon. Hansen emphasized teamwork and calculated risk, promising to share images after the...

The Loadstar Snapshot Ep. 3: Why Air Cargo Fuel Surcharges Are Splitting Apart
Air cargo fuel surcharges, previously clustered around HK$3‑4 per kilo (≈$0.38‑$0.51/kg), diverged sharply in March as jet‑fuel prices spiked. Cathay Cargo lifted its long‑haul surcharge to HK$12.9 per kilo (≈$1.65/kg), while Lufthansa Cargo, Atlas Air, Japan Airlines and China Airlines...

Air Bonanza Leases Three Freighters
Air Bonanza Express, a Kenyan charter carrier, has leased two Ilyushin IL‑76 and one Boeing 757‑200F freighters to boost its intra‑Africa and Africa‑Asia services. One IL‑76 will handle oversized cargo on a new Mumbai‑Africa corridor, while the second will connect key East...

Hannover Airport Becomes New Partner of the International Airline Association BARIG
The Board of Airline Representatives in Germany (BARIG) has added Hannover Airport (HAJ) as a new partner. The collaboration will focus on improving passenger experience, ground handling, security and sustainability. HAJ, the only international airport in Lower Saxony, handled about...

7 Airlines With The World’s Most Efficient Widebody Fleets
The article ranks seven airlines with the world’s most efficient widebody fleets, highlighting how modern jets like the Boeing 787 Dreamliner and Airbus A350 cut fuel burn by roughly 20% per seat versus older models. It details each carrier’s renewal...

LeoLabs’ Delta Platform Signals a Turning Point: Space Situational Awareness Is Now a Military Product
LeoLabs has launched Delta, a threat‑detection platform that moves space situational awareness from pure collision avoidance to identifying hostile intent in low‑Earth orbit. The system analyzes radar data and orbital patterns to flag co‑planar maneuvers and repeated close approaches that...

Primoco UAV Obtains Final Building Permit for New Manufacturing Facility in Písek
Primoco UAV SE secured the final building permit for a new $34 million manufacturing complex in Písek, Czech Republic. The plant, slated to begin production in 2028, will raise annual UAV output to up to 300 units and house headquarters, a...
Auriga Space Charges up the Launch Game
Auriga Space is building a reusable, electricity‑powered accelerator that replaces the first stage of traditional rockets, aiming to cut launch costs and eliminate the two‑year backlog that plagues the industry. Founder Winnie Lai likens the system to a maglev train,...

IMSAR Showcases Low-SWaP Radar at Army S/VTOL Summit
IMSAR LLC presented its low‑SWaP NSP‑5 through NSP‑8 radar family at the Army S/VTOL Group 4+ Summit in Huntsville, Alabama, engaging directly with Army program managers and industry partners. The radars deliver Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imaging and Moving Target Indicator...

NASA’s Private Space Station Program Is Stuck in Procurement Limbo — And the Clock Is Ticking on ISS
NASA’s Commercial Low‑Earth‑Orbit Destinations (CLD) program, intended to replace the aging International Space Station with private stations, has missed its April 2026 award target and still has not issued a final request for proposals. Delays stem from leadership turnover, a...
U.S. Air Forces Central Selects Skydio Dock to Secure U.S. Airbases in the Middle East
Skydio secured a contract worth more than $9 million from U.S. Air Forces Central to deploy its Dock autonomous‑security system and X10 drones across Middle‑East airbases. The Dock can launch an X10 drone in under 20 seconds, delivering live HD and...

HOBBYWING Showcases Heavy-Lift Coaxial Propulsion Systems at XPONENTIAL Europe 2026
At XPONENTIAL Europe 2026, Hobbywing unveiled its new heavy‑lift coaxial propulsion systems, the H15MD Plus and P115M, aimed at industrial UAVs. The H15MD Plus delivers 80 kg thrust per axis and supports 150‑200 kg payloads in an eight‑propeller configuration, while the P115M offers 115 kg...

Major Boost for Starlink
The FCC will vote on April 30 to lift longstanding power caps on satellite spectrum, a move that could boost Starlink’s capacity up to seven times and generate about $2 billion in economic benefits. Existing 1990s rules limit transmission power, restricting speeds...

Fire Erupts During Test Of The SpaceX Starship V3 Engine
SpaceX experienced a fire during a Texas test of its Starship V3 Raptor engine on April 9, 2026. The incident, captured on a NASA Spaceflight livestream, showed a loud pop followed by a burst of flames on the Raptor North...
NASA Artemis II Astronauts Prepare to End Moon Mission in 'Fireball' Re-Entry
NASA’s Artemis II crew completed a historic ten‑day flight, becoming the farthest‑flying humans at roughly 252,000 miles from Earth. The Orion capsule will re‑enter the atmosphere at 23,839 mph, subjecting its heat shield to a high‑risk "fireball" descent. Astronauts held a live press...

Artemis II Is 'Inspiring' A Whole Generation
Artemis II completed a historic crewed lunar fly‑by, the first such mission since Apollo 8, and is now on its return to Earth after a ten‑day journey. The four astronauts—Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch and Jeremy Hansen—spent more than two years...

Space Mission to Image Earth's Protective Bubble
A first‑of‑its‑kind mission called SMILE will orbit 120,000 km above the North Pole to image Earth’s magnetosphere using X‑ray emissions from solar wind. Led by UCL’s Mullard Space Science Laboratory with partners including ESA, the University of Leicester and the Chinese...

Artemis 2 Crew Reflects on Lunar Flyby and Earth’s Fragility During Briefing
NASA’s Artemis 2 crew held an in‑flight press conference as Orion coasted back to Earth, reflecting on the historic lunar flyby and the mission’s emotional moments. Commander Reid Wiseman recounted the crew’s surprise tribute of naming a lunar crater “Carroll” for...

India Slashes Airport Charges to Shield Domestic Airlines From ATF Surge Amid West Asia Conflict
India's Ministry of Civil Aviation announced a 25% reduction in landing and parking charges for domestic carriers for three months, effective immediately, to offset soaring jet fuel costs triggered by the West Asia conflict. The cut, applied to all non‑major...

Nasa Meteorologists Trialling Model to Produce Ultra Local, Short-Term Forecasts
NASA meteorologists at the Wallops Flight Facility are trialling a new ultra‑high‑resolution weather model called US1k, developed by Meteomatics. The model delivers forecasts on a 1 km grid every 15 minutes, nine times finer than typical operational models. By providing a zoomed‑in...

Everything You Need to Know About Artemis II so Far – Podcast
The Guardian’s Science Weekly podcast recaps NASA’s Artemis II mission, where the four‑astronaut crew broke Apollo 13’s distance‑from‑Earth record during a ten‑day lunar flyby. The episode details technical hiccups the crew faced, the breathtaking views of the Moon, and the intense emotional...
UK Becomes Top Destination for US Jet Fuel
U.S. jet fuel exports have surged to the United Kingdom, making the UK the top overseas destination for American jet fuel. The shift follows a supply squeeze in the Gulf region, where refinery outages and geopolitical tensions have limited output....

Sovereign Satellite Networks: Strategic Necessity or Costly Political Redundancy?
Governments are redefining satellite sovereignty after Ukraine’s reliance on Starlink exposed political vulnerability, prompting a surge in demand for assured, controllable communications. In Europe, the EU’s pooled GOVSATCOM and IRIS² initiatives contrast with national projects in Germany and Italy, highlighting...

Not Russian S-400, Franco-Italian SAMP/T Could Be Part Of Turkey’s Steel Dome Air Defense Network?
Turkey is in talks with Italy to jointly produce the Franco‑Italian SAMP/T air‑defence system, aiming to slot it into the AI‑enhanced Steel Dome network. The move follows a series of Iranian missile attacks that highlighted gaps in Turkey’s long‑range coverage,...

NTIA Space Launch Frequency Coordination Portal: Inside the System Replacing Decades of Email-Based Spectrum Management
The National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) launched the Space Launch Frequency Coordination Portal, a web‑based system that replaces the decades‑old email process for securing S‑band spectrum during commercial launches. The portal, live since March 24, 2026, routes requests through a single...

Quantum-Secure Satellite Communications and the Future of Protected Networks
Quantum‑secure satellite communications are transitioning from concept to early service architecture, using quantum key distribution from orbit to protect high‑value links. Government programs such as ESA’s SAGA, the QKDSat‑Redwire partnership, and Canada’s QEYSSat illustrate strategic investment driven by sovereignty and...

Space Supply Chain Resilience and Sovereign Industrial Capacity
Space agencies and governments are elevating supply‑chain resilience to a strategic priority, recognizing that mission success hinges on a fragile network of valves, electronics, and specialty materials. NASA’s civil space industrial base assessment and ESA’s industrialisation campaign illustrate a coordinated...

6 Military Aircraft That Were Produced In Lower Numbers
The article ranks six iconic military aircraft that were produced in unusually small numbers despite their strategic importance. Production totals range from 21 Northrop B‑2 Spirits to 64 Lockheed F‑117 Nighthawks, illustrating how high development costs, shifting doctrines, and end‑of‑Cold‑War...

Iran Ceasefire Still Leaves Airlines Facing High Fuel Costs, Even if Peace Endures
A two‑week cease‑fire announced on 8 April temporarily eased financial markets, but oil prices remain well above pre‑conflict levels. Reduced refinery capacity in Iran and a lingering backlog of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz have pushed jet‑fuel prices to...

Bratislava’s Expansion Tests the Limits of the LCC-Driven Central and Eastern Europe Airport Model
Bratislava’s M.R. Štefánik Airport has rebounded to passenger levels exceeding its 2019 peak, driven by a surge in low‑cost carrier routes slated for summer 2026. Ryanair’s announced base at the airport and Wizz Air’s planned return are set to deepen the LCC footprint,...

Air Force Tanker, Airlift Fleet Could Get a ‘Moving Map App’ to Boost Battlespace Awareness
The Defense Innovation Unit (DIU) announced a request for proposals to develop a modular, open‑mission engine (OMEN) that will host a moving‑map application for Air Force tanker and airlift aircraft. The tool aims to give crews a real‑time common operating...
Archer Aviation: Buying The Dip Despite Manufacturing Challenges
Archer Aviation, once hailed in late 2024 for its eVTOL technology and strong regulatory momentum, has seen its share price stall after an initial surge. Over the past year the company faced shareholder dilution, production bottlenecks, and a delayed launch...
China Launches 18 More Qianfan Internet Satellites
China’s Long March 8 rocket lifted off from Wenchang, placing 18 additional Qianfan internet satellites into low‑Earth orbit. The launch brings the total deployed to 137, part of a planned constellation that could eventually host up to 10,000 spacecraft, though the...
Not Everyone’s Gone To The Moon
The United States has completed 45 lunar missions—the most of any nation—culminating with the Artemis II launch on April 1, 2026. The former USSR conducted 22 missions between 1959 and 1976, while China has logged ten, including a serendipitous 1997 Hong Kong satellite...
ABF-Deal-Digest:-Dubai-Aerospace,-BXCI-Launch-Aircraft-Leasing-Partnership
Dubai Aerospace and BXCI have announced a joint venture to create a dedicated aircraft leasing platform. The partnership will employ asset‑backed securitisation to fund a pipeline of roughly $1.2 billion in new narrow‑body and wide‑body jets. By bundling lease receivables into...

Indonesian Wealth Fund Enters Global Aircraft Leasing Market- #Wealth #AssetManagement #AssetFinance
Indonesia’s newly created sovereign wealth vehicle, Danantara Investment Management, announced a partnership with Japan’s SMBC Aviation Capital and local Mandiri Investment Management to launch the Mandiri Aviation Leasing Fund. The fund will acquire and lease commercial aircraft to airlines worldwide,...

Delta Air Lines Reportedly Plans New Premium-Heavy Airbus A330-900neo Debut To London
Delta Air Lines is reportedly planning a premium‑heavy configuration for its Airbus A330‑900neo on London routes, targeting more than 60% premium seats and over 50 Delta One seats. The airline highlighted premium demand during its Q1 earnings call, noting that...

ABC International Strengthens Aviation Supply Chain Position with Lioni Facility
ABC International has opened a 300‑square‑meter production facility in Lioni, Italy, expanding its certified manufacturing capabilities for aircraft cabin interiors. The site, inaugurated in September 2025, meets EASA Part‑21G standards and supports upholstery, branding elements, and composite partitions for line‑fit and...

SpaceX Starship Engine Test Is Successful In Every Way, Except For All Of The Exploding
SpaceX’s latest ground test of the Raptor 3 engine, slated for the Starship V3 launch vehicle, ended in a dramatic explosion that destroyed the test article. The test, conducted at the Starbase facility in Texas, was intended to verify the performance...

Bamboo Airways Builds Passenger Trust Through Punctuality and Consistent Service
Bamboo Airways, launched in 2019, positions itself as a full‑service carrier that blends Vietnamese hospitality with a relentless focus on on‑time performance. CEO Truong Phuong Thanh says punctuality is a baseline requirement, earning the airline top OTP rankings in Vietnam...

Philippine Airlines Blends Modernization with Filipino Identity to Redefine Full-Service Travel
Philippine Airlines is rolling out an ambitious fleet‑modernization program that adds next‑generation aircraft, upgraded cabins, expanded entertainment and high‑speed connectivity. The airline’s strategy couples this technology push with a renewed emphasis on its Filipino‑centric hospitality, aiming to create a seamless,...

How Mining Companies Use Satellite Connectivity to Keep Remote Operations Running
Satellite connectivity has moved from a temporary backup to a core component of remote mining operations. Providers now offer multi‑orbit services—geostationary, medium‑Earth and low‑Earth—allowing mines to blend high‑capacity bulk links with low‑latency interactive streams. This backhaul supports everything from autonomous...

5 Experimental Aircraft That Never Reached Mass Production
A series of groundbreaking aircraft—from the Northrop YB‑49 flying wing to Boeing’s 2707 supersonic airliner—were halted before mass production despite their technical promise. The cancellations stemmed from factors such as missing fly‑by‑wire technology, public opposition to sonic booms, rising development...
Hong Kong's Metrojet Inducts First G700
Hong Kong‑based Metrojet has taken delivery of its first Gulfstream G700, the flagship ultra‑long‑range business jet from Gulfstream Aerospace. Valued at roughly $75 million, the aircraft expands Metrojet’s premium fleet and enhances its capability to serve high‑net‑worth travelers across Asia. The...

How Artemis II Astronauts Readjust to Earth
NASA’s Artemis II crew, launched April 1, is slated to splash down off San Diego on April 10, ending a ten‑day lunar flyby. The Orion capsule will be recovered by the U.S. Navy, with astronauts moved to a ship‑board medical bay within two hours...

Korean Air Charts Future of Inflight Connectivity with Starlink Integration
Korean Air announced a partnership with SpaceX to equip its long‑haul 777‑300ER and A350‑900 fleet with Starlink satellite‑based Wi‑Fi, promising up to 500 Mbps speeds. The airline, which earned a Five‑Star Global rating for the ninth year, aims to replace its...

Porter Airlines Expands with Free Wi-Fi and New Routes
Porter Airlines has rolled out unlimited free gate‑to‑gate Wi‑Fi on its E195‑E2 fleet, becoming the first Canadian carrier to offer the service at no cost. The airline is expanding beyond Canada and the United States with new routes to Mexico,...

Automation and Agility: How SSC Space Go Is Designed for the New Age of Ground
SSC Space unveiled its SSC Space Go service, a software‑defined ground segment that virtualizes antenna stations via Kratos’ OpenSpace platform. The network of 4‑meter antennas spans five locations—Sweden, Alaska, Canada, Australia and Chile—offering dual‑polarization S, X and Ka‑band connectivity for...

Nantucket Flight Returns After Part of Cabin Door Opens Midair
On April 8, 2026 a Cape Air commuter flight departing Nantucket experienced a partial opening of its main cabin door shortly after takeoff. The crew promptly turned back and landed safely at Nantucket Memorial Airport with no injuries reported. The aircraft was...