
Airlines Cut Flights and Hike Fares as Fuel Prices Surge
Airlines worldwide are slashing routes and raising ticket prices as jet‑fuel costs soar to a record $1,838 per tonne (about $1,761 USD) after the US‑Israeli‑Iran conflict disrupted Middle‑Eastern supplies. The price, more than double the pre‑war $831 level, threatens to push fuel expenses to 40 % of airline operating costs. Carriers such as Air India and Air New Zealand have announced cancellations and distance‑based surcharges, while others rely on pre‑war fixed‑price contracts to avoid immediate hikes. Analysts warn the tightening market could intensify fare increases ahead of the summer travel peak.

The Artemis II Crew Dedicate a Moon Crater to the Late Wife of Their NASA Commander
During the historic Artemis II lunar flyby, the crew named a newly identified crater after Commander Reid Wiseman’s late wife, Carroll Wiseman. The "Carroll Crater" sits on the boundary between the Moon’s near and far sides and can occasionally be seen...
Pilots’ Group Warns of Conflict-Zone Strain
The International Federation of Air Line Pilots’ Associations (IFALPA) warns that prolonged conflict‑zone flying should not become routine, highlighting persistent operational complexity and safety risks. European regulators echo concerns as narrowing Middle‑East corridors concentrate traffic, raising the likelihood of incidents....
Northrop Grumman’s Minotaur-4 Rocket Launches Three Payloads for War Department
Northrop Grumman successfully launched its Minotaur-4 rocket from Vandenberg Space Force Base, delivering three experimental payloads for the Navy’s Naval Research Laboratory. The payloads—LARADO, GOSAS, and GARI-1C—focus on space‑debris tracking, advanced GPS‑type navigation for military use, and gamma‑ray detection for...

EdgeRunner Wins U.S. Space Force Contract for AI Agents
EdgeRunner AI has been awarded a firm‑fixed price contract by the U.S. Space Force to deliver domain‑specific artificial‑intelligence agents for Guardians. Over the next six months the startup will deploy its on‑device platform into the Space Force’s IL‑5 classified environment,...

The Next Decade in Space: Global Exploration Missions From 2026 to 2036
The 2026‑2036 decade will see a surge of space missions across the Moon, Mars, Venus, Mercury, and the outer planets, driven by NASA, ESA, CNSA, ISRO, JAXA and an expanding commercial sector. NASA’s Artemis IV targets the first crewed lunar...

Has Artemis II Shown We Can Land on the Moon Again?
NASA’s Artemis II crewed test flight demonstrated that the Space Launch System delivered its full 8.8 million‑pound thrust and that Orion’s translunar‑injection burn was flawless, eliminating the need for planned mid‑course corrections. The mission revealed typical human‑factor hiccups—toilet, water‑dispenser, and helium system...

NASA’s Space Reactor-1 Freedom: America’s First Nuclear-Powered Mission to Mars
NASA announced Space Reactor‑1 Freedom, a nuclear‑electric spacecraft slated for a December 2028 launch to Mars, marking the United States’ first deep‑space mission powered by a fission reactor. The vehicle repurposes the Lunar Gateway Power and Propulsion Element, pairing a >20 kW...
Firefly Signs Deal with Modular Sea Launch Startup Seagate
Seagate Space Corporation and Firefly Aerospace have signed a Memorandum of Understanding to jointly develop a modular offshore launch platform for Firefly’s Alpha rocket. The platform, based on Seagate’s Gateway Series, is designed to provide a purpose‑built sea‑based spaceport capable...

Panasonic Avionics Furthers IFEC Integration in the Cabin Amid Astrova Milestones
Panasonic Avionics closed 2025 with its Astrova inflight entertainment system reaching 100 airline programs across 30 carriers, highlighted by wins with Emirates and flydubai in the Middle East. The company also rolled out its Converix open‑application platform and the Arc™...

MGI Engineering Completes First Flights of TigerShark Strike Platform
MGI Engineering announced the TigerShark, an autonomous deep‑strike UAV, completed its first flight on April 1, marking the first European system of this class tested in over a decade. The subsonic, one‑way platform can carry a 300 kg payload, has a cruise...

Astroscale Plans World-First Multi-Orbit Satellite Inspection Mission
Astroscale Japan announced the ISSA‑J1 mission, the first multi‑orbit satellite inspection to demonstrate a single servicer spacecraft navigating between distinct orbits and approaching non‑cooperative targets. The mission will inspect Japan’s retired ALOS satellite and the failed ADEOS‑II, capturing high‑resolution imagery...
Artemis II Sets New Human Distance Record During Lunar Flyby
NASA’s Artemis II mission completed a historic lunar flyby, sending four astronauts farther from Earth than any humans before them. The crew reached roughly 260,000 miles (about 418,000 km) from the planet, eclipsing the Apollo 13 record set in 1970. The flight marked the...

Aeroprime Group Grows Cargo Talent
Aeroprime Group announced the appointment of Bhavana Khera as Assistant Vice President of Marketing & Customer Success for its cargo division. Khera brings extensive B2B marketing, brand management, and customer‑engagement experience from firms like CargoFlash, Shine.com, and Huawei. In her...
Ohio Symposium Celebrates Over Half a Century and Looks Toward the Future of Aerospace
The AIAA Dayton‑Cincinnati Section hosted its 51st annual aerospace symposium in Dayton, Ohio, featuring over 130 technical presentations from industry, academia, and students. The event’s theme, “LI,” cleverly combined the Roman numeral for 51 with the chemical symbol for lithium...
Fuel Crisis Forces Airlines to Cancel Flights Globally
A sharp surge in jet‑fuel prices, driven by geopolitical tensions and refinery outages, has forced airlines worldwide to slash schedules and cancel thousands of flights. Carriers are trimming up to 10% of their weekly departures, with European and Asian markets...

Arastelle Joins Red Cat Futures Initiative to Expand Persistent ISR and Tactical Communications Capabilities
Red Cat Holdings announced that Arastelle Drone Solutions has joined its Futures Initiative, integrating Arastelle’s modular tethered UAS technology with Red Cat’s drone family, including the Black Widow platform. The partnership enables persistent ISR, communications relay, and extended flight times...

An AI Company with an Arsenal of Spacecraft: What Exactly Is SpaceX?
SpaceX filed a confidential S‑1 seeking a valuation up to $1.75 trillion, combining its rocket launch business, Starlink satellite‑internet service, and the newly‑acquired AI firm xAI. The filing, which could lead to an IPO as early as June, positions Elon Musk’s...

ParaZero Technologies Expands Israeli Defense Contract with New Order for Anti-Drone Systems
ParaZero Technologies announced a follow‑on purchase order from an Israeli defense entity for its DefendAir Counter‑Unmanned Aerial Systems. The order expands an existing contract and underscores the growing demand for soft‑kill anti‑drone solutions that use a patented net‑launch mechanism. ParaZero...
Aerospace Logistics: Daher Strengthens Its Partnership with Safran
Safran has awarded Daher two new aerospace‑logistics contracts. In Hamburg, Daher will station a 20‑person team to handle engine‑nacelle integration for the A320neo program, expanding its existing logistics footprint in Germany. In France, Daher will build a 3,000 m² platform in...
Blackstone and Tinicum Agree £1.4bn Deal for UK Aerospace Supplier Senior
Blackstone and Tinicum have agreed to acquire Senior, a UK aerospace components supplier, for roughly £1.4 billion. The partnership blends Blackstone's private‑equity resources with Tinicum's sector expertise, aiming to accelerate Senior’s growth in high‑value aircraft and defence programmes. Financing is expected...

General Cherry Partnering with Orqa FPV
General Cherry has announced a partnership with European UAV manufacturer Orqa FPV to build an underground factory that will produce drone components free of Chinese parts. The joint venture will establish production lines in Ukraine and Croatia, leveraging Ukraine’s battlefield‑tested...

'Unreal' Solar Eclipse: Artemis 2 Crew Just Saw One of the Rarest Sights in Spaceflight History
NASA’s Artemis 2 crew witnessed a total solar eclipse from the far side of the Moon on 6 April 2026. The Orion spacecraft’s trajectory placed the astronauts in a position to see the Moon completely block the Sun for about 53 minutes, far...
Delta Stock: Earnings Coming Up — It Has This Jet Fuel Advantage Over Peers.
Delta Air Lines will report earnings first among U.S. carriers as jet fuel prices spike amid the Iran‑War. The airline’s ownership of the Monroe Energy refinery in Pennsylvania gives it a strategic edge in securing Northeast jet fuel supply, cushioning...

SF Airlines Launches Direct Cargo Route From Ezhou to Paris
Chinese cargo carrier SF Airlines has launched a direct freighter service linking Ezhou Huahu International Airport (EHU) with Paris Charles‑de‑Gaulle (CDG), marking its first long‑haul route into Europe. The inaugural flight departed on April 1, 2026 using a Boeing 747‑400 freighter. The...
Nigeria’s Evolving Defence Industry
In March 2026 Nigeria received 15 Vanquisher light armoured personnel carriers built by state‑owned DICON in partnership with Vanquish Industries, marking a step toward domestic defence self‑sufficiency. DICON, historically a license‑producer of small arms, has expanded into mine‑resistant ambush‑protected (MRAP)...
Reliable Robotics Completes Detect and Avoid Testing for the FAA
Reliable Robotics announced the completion of a Federal Aviation Administration contract to conduct Detect and Avoid (DAA) flight tests using its ACAS X‑based system around Hollister Municipal Airport. The campaign, performed with Virginia Tech and partners Sagetech, Collins and uAvionix, generated...

Trump's $2.2T Proposed Defense Budget Boosts Lockheed Martin's Outlook
President Trump’s $2.2 trillion FY2027 defense budget proposal backs the purchase of 85 new F‑35 jets, easing the biggest downside risk to Lockheed Martin’s outlook. The Pentagon’s support comes as the company holds a record $194 billion backlog, providing revenue visibility through...
NASA’s Artemis II Astronauts Celebrate Epic Lunar Flyby with Stunning New Images
NASA’s Artemis II crew completed a historic lunar flyby, becoming the farthest humans from Earth and capturing unprecedented images of the Moon’s far side. The mission also featured the first Earthrise and total solar eclipse observed by astronauts since Apollo, along...
Qantas Begins 1st-Ever Dedicated Freighter Service to Singapore
Qantas Freight launched its first dedicated freighter service to Singapore, operating twice weekly on a Sydney‑Shanghai‑Singapore‑Sydney rotation using an Airbus A330‑200 conversion with over 55 tons of payload. The new route expands capacity beyond existing passenger‑based cargo flights and addresses rising...

South Korea’s Navy Deploys First Two MH-60R Seahawks Amid Pyongyang Regime Sub Threat
South Korea’s navy placed its first two MH‑60R Seahawk helicopters into service on April 1, completing delivery of ten of the twelve aircraft ordered under a 2020 U.S. Foreign Military Sales deal. The helicopters, equipped with advanced sonar, radar and anti‑ship...
April 7, 1991: Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Is Deployed
NASA’s Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) was deployed from Space Shuttle Atlantis on April 7, 1991, marking the launch of the agency’s third Great Observatory focused on gamma‑ray astronomy. A thermal‑blanket snag that prevented the high‑gain antenna from opening required an unscheduled...

Starfish Closes $100M+ Series B
Starfish Space announced a Series B round exceeding $100 million, led by Point72 Ventures and co‑led by Activate Capital and Shield Capital, with participation from several other investors. The capital will fund the company’s first full‑scale Otter mission, expand production capacity,...

Starfish Space Raises More than $100 Million
Starfish Space announced a Series B round that raised over $100 million, led by Point72 Ventures and co‑led by Activate Capital and Shield Capital. The capital will be used to scale production of its Otter line of satellite‑servicing spacecraft and to hire...

NASA’s New Moon Base Project Requires Operational Technology Systems in Space, but They Are Vulnerable.
NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman announced a $20 billion Moon‑base program, shifting from a lunar‑orbit station to a surface settlement. The plan, timed against China’s 2030 lunar landing goal, includes robotic landers, drones, and a future nuclear power plant. Experts warn the...

Advanced Mobile Phone Detection & Geolocation Solutions for UAVs
Smith Myers, a UK‑based specialist in wireless technologies, has joined Unmanned Systems Technology’s Gold supplier network with its ARTEMIS family of mobile‑phone detection and geolocation systems for UAVs. The flagship ARTEMIS can locate 2G devices up to 35 km and LTE...

US Diverts JASSM-ER Missiles to Iran, Risking Deterrence vs China
The United States has redirected roughly two‑thirds of its JASSM‑ER long‑range cruise missile inventory to the Iran conflict, leaving only about 425 of the original 2,300 missiles available worldwide. The shift pulls missiles from reserves earmarked for the Pacific and...
Nominate Space Industry Leaders for the 2026 SpaceNews Icon Awards
SpaceNews has opened nominations for its 2026 Icon Awards, inviting the global space community to recognize innovators, collaborators and change‑makers. Nominations close on August 14, with the awards ceremony scheduled for December 1 at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Center in...

In-Space Manufacturing’s Billion-Dollar Problem: Great Science, No Business Model
In‑space manufacturing has demonstrated scientific promise for decades, yet no product has achieved commercial viability. The primary obstacle remains the economics of launching, operating, and returning payloads, which far exceed the market value of niche items like ZBLAN fiber or...

The State of EO 2026
The Earth observation (EO) market is shifting toward sovereign satellite capabilities as nations seek independent data amid geopolitical tensions, highlighted by recent wars in Ukraine and Iran. Companies such as BlackSky, Vantor, and Planet secured multi‑million‑dollar contracts, with BlackSky alone...

How Earthlings Got Views of the Lunar Fly By
Redwire has equipped NASA’s Orion crew capsule with 11 high‑resolution cameras positioned inside and outside the vehicle. The interior lenses will stream crew window and instrument panel views, while exterior cameras will document key events such as service module separation,...

After Artemis: What a Sustained Lunar Presence Actually Means for Deep Space Exploration Economics
The Artemis program, now entering its crewed Artemis II flight, aims to transition from short‑term visits to a permanent lunar presence, with landings slated from 2028 and a base camp envisioned for the 2030s. Total program costs through 2025 are projected...
NASA’s Artemis Era May Finally Solve Three Major Moon Mysteries
NASA’s Artemis program, now in its crewed Artemis II flight, is laying the groundwork for a sustained lunar presence that could finally answer three long‑standing moon mysteries. Upcoming Artemis IV (targeted for 2028) will deliver the Lunar Environment Monitoring Station, creating the...

Indonesia to Get First KF-21 Fighter Jet From South Korea
South Korea and Indonesia have agreed to transfer the fifth KF‑21 Boramae prototype to Jakarta, valued at roughly $398 million, once Indonesia settles the final $42 million payment by June 2026. The hand‑over follows a decade‑long joint‑development program that began in 2015,...

Challenge Acquires Two More 777‑300ERs for Freighter Conversions
Challenge Group announced the acquisition of two additional Boeing 777‑300ER aircraft to serve as feedstock for its passenger‑to‑freighter (P2F) conversion programme. The move supports the company’s ambition to operate a 20‑aircraft freighter fleet by the end of the decade. The...

Transcendent Unveils Aircraft for Drone Interdiction
Transcendent Aerospace announced two aircraft— a flight‑tested Very Light Jet and an Optionally Piloted Aircraft built on the same airframe—designed specifically for airborne drone interdiction. Both platforms can locate, pursue, speed‑match, and neutralize hostile UAVs using electronic or mechanical methods,...

Rescue Mission Preceded by Bombing
The United States launched a large‑scale rescue operation for the second crew member of a downed F‑15 over Iran, preceding the effort with roughly one hundred 900‑kilogram bombs dropped by B‑1 bombers to cripple IRGC roads and garrisons. A total...

Does Humanity Actually Need Astronauts?
The article argues that human spaceflight is vastly more expensive than robotic alternatives, citing the Artemis program’s $93 billion price tag versus the $2.7 billion Perseverance rover. It highlights that robotic missions such as Voyager, Perseverance, and the James Webb telescope have produced...

Earth Observation Operators Push to Deliver Satellite Images Within Minutes
Earth‑observation firms are racing to shrink image‑delivery latency from hours to minutes, with Vantor showcasing a 13‑minute turnaround and BlackSky’s Gen‑3 satellite delivering first‑light imagery within hours of launch. Government and commercial clients now demand sub‑20‑minute, often sub‑10‑minute, access to...
Airbility, iBuzz, KILSA Partner to Develop High-Speed Security eVTOLs
South Korean eVTOL developer Airbility has signed an MoU with Thailand’s NT iBuzz, SmartOkO Thailand, and Singapore‑based KILSA Global to develop high‑speed, security‑focused unmanned aircraft. The partnership will combine Airbility’s high‑speed eVTOL platform with iBuzz’s secure communications, SmartOkO’s AI video‑analytics,...