
The Exploration Company Completes Nyx Splashdown Tests
The Exploration Company announced the completion of a controlled splashdown test campaign for a 1:4‑scale mockup of its Nyx reusable capsule. Conducted at the National Research Council’s Institute of Marine Engineering in Rome, the program executed 20 drops between 13 and 28 January, gathering pressure, acceleration and gyroscope data. The results are being used to fine‑tune hydrodynamic coefficients and structural margins ahead of the planned 2028 ESA‑backed LEO cargo‑return flight. Successful validation of the recovery sequence clears a key hurdle for future lunar and crewed variants of Nyx.
Outlook 2026: The Airliner Projects that Promise New Technology and Lower Emissions
The 2026 outlook surveys airliner projects that break away from traditional gas‑turbine tube‑and‑wing designs, emphasizing lower emissions and potential cost reductions. The analysis narrows to programs closest to certification, filtering out the dozens of concepts still in early stages. Despite...

Rolls-Royce’s Trent 1000 XE Targets 787 Comeback
Rolls‑Royce unveiled the Trent 1000 XE, the new production‑standard engine for all future Boeing 787 deliveries. The XE incorporates a Durability Enhancement package that boosts time‑on‑wing and cuts emissions compared with the Trent 1000 TEN. The launch follows a slowdown in 787 engine orders and...

Hormuz on the Brink?
U.S. forces escalated the standoff with Iran after an F‑35 shot down an Iranian drone that approached a carrier in the Arabian Sea. Both sides have scheduled high‑level talks in Istanbul, raising hopes for a diplomatic de‑escalation. The dispute centers...

The Kremlin Files: Russian Double Agents and Operational Games
The article explains that Russian intelligence agencies prioritize loyalty to Putin and the regime over national interests, making double‑agent operations—called operational games—their core doctrine. These operations generate fabricated success stories and statistics that feed directly into Kremlin budget justifications. Historical...
Lufthansa Group to Retain Current IFC Until Starlink Pivot Is Complete
Lufthansa Group announced a fleet‑wide shift to SpaceX Starlink, planning rollout from late 2026 to 2029, while retaining its existing inflight connectivity (IFC) systems—Viasat’s European Aviation Network (EAN) on narrow‑bodies and Panasonic’s multi‑orbit solution on some A330s—until Starlink is fully...

Indonesia Abandons F-15EX, Selects M-346F to Replace Hawk
Indonesia has officially dropped its plan to buy 24 Boeing F‑15EX fighters, ending a stalled procurement that began with an MOU in 2023. Instead, the country signed a Letter of Intent with Leonardo for the M‑346F Block 20, a light‑fighter/advanced trainer...
Press Release: Panasonic to Explore LEO IFC Opportunities with Spacesail
Panasonic Avionics announced an MOU with Shanghai Spacesail Technologies to integrate Spacesail’s Low Earth Orbit (LEO) satellite constellation into its in‑flight connectivity (IFEC) network, enhancing global broadband coverage for airlines. The partnership aims to deliver higher speeds, lower latency, and...
Press Release: CAE to Deliver Breakthrough FFS to Train Eve eVTOL Pilots
At the Singapore Airshow 2026, CAE announced that its joint venture with Embraer, Embraer‑CAE Training Services (ECTS), will receive its first full‑flight simulator (FFS) dedicated to training pilots for Eve Air Mobility’s eVTOL aircraft. The CAE 3000 series simulator features...

Singapore Air Show Reports only One Airline Order Today
The Singapore Air Show closed with only a single airline order, underscoring a tentative market mood. Pratt & Whitney reported a modest pickup in engine interest, while Vietjet remains cautious until the new geared‑turbo‑fan (GTF) engines prove reliable. Meanwhile, China...

Isar Aerospace to Expand Testing Facilities as It Prepares for Next Spectrum Flight
Isar Aerospace announced a purpose‑built acceptance test facility at Sweden’s Esrange Space Center, boosting its capacity to test over 30 Aquila engines per month and conduct full stage acceptance tests. The expansion comes as the company readies the second flight...

Federal Push for Critical Minerals Stockpiling: 2025 in Review and Outlook for 2026
The U.S. Defense Logistics Agency is accelerating critical‑minerals stockpiling, with a $1 billion procurement plan announced for 2025 and new RFIs covering scarce elements such as scandium, tungsten and rare‑earths. Recent legislation, notably the One Big Beautiful Act, injected $2 billion into the National...

Day 2 Singapore Airshow: Tigerair Taiwan Adds A321neos to the Fleet
Tigerair Taiwan announced a direct order for four Airbus A321neo jets at the Singapore Airshow, marking Airbus' first order on the event’s second day. The new aircraft will increase seat capacity to 232 per plane, complementing the carrier’s existing fleet...
Airlines Prevail In Striking Down Biden-Era War On ‘Junk Fees’ Rule After Long Court Battle
A U.S. appeals court has vacated the Biden administration’s “junk‑fee” rule that would have required airlines to display all ancillary charges up front. The judges determined the DOT relied on a study that was not released during the public comment...

HAL Sidelined, Private Giants Shortlisted for India’s AMCA Stealth Jet
India's Ministry of Defence has shortlisted three private aerospace giants—Tata Advanced Systems, Larsen & Toubro and Bharat Forge—to lead the development of the Advanced Medium Combat Aircraft (AMCA), the country's first indigenous fifth‑generation stealth fighter. For the first time, state‑run Hindustan Aeronautics...
United Airlines Clears Massive Tech Upgrade That Took Nearly All Critical Services Offline and Grounded Planes
United Airlines executed a four‑and‑a‑half‑hour, full‑system shutdown on Wednesday to advance one of the largest technology upgrades in its history. The outage disabled flight booking, check‑in, MileagePlus accounts and even the customer‑service line, forcing flight retimes and cancellations. The carrier...

The Case for Vueling's Zero-Avios Move
The episode examines Vueling’s decision to stop offering Avios points to most passengers, outlining the new tiered earn rates that only reward higher spenders. It argues that the move is unlikely to generate extra revenue but can save costs by...

OVO Energy Is Looking Shaky – Its Failure Would Dwarf that of Bulb
OVO Energy, a UK supplier serving over four million homes, is facing a severe financial crisis that could lead to bankruptcy within a year. The company posted the lowest customer‑satisfaction score in the 2025 Which? survey and is one of...
Press Release: Singapore to Become R&D Centre for Thales FlytEDGE
During the Singapore Airshow 2026, Thales announced new MoUs with Singapore's Economic Development Board to expand its AI, cloud, edge computing, and data engineering capabilities, positioning Singapore as one of three global R&D centres for its FlytEDGE inflight entertainment platform....

What’s the Big Obsession With Doors?
Cathay Pacific’s new Aria business‑class suite on its Boeing 777‑300 now features a sliding door, joining a growing fleet of premium cabins that prioritize enclosure. The author, on a two‑hour Bangkok‑Hong Kong flight, praised the suite’s spacious layout, high‑quality food and...

Air Cambodia Places Their Largest Ever Single-Aisle Order
Air Cambodia announced its largest single‑aisle purchase, ordering up to 20 Boeing 737 Max 8 jets at the Singapore Airshow. The deal includes a firm order for 10 aircraft with options for another 10, aiming to expand the carrier’s network across North...

U.S. F-35C Shoots Down Iranian Drone Heading for USS Lincoln
On February 3 2026 a U.S. F‑35C launched from the USS Abraham Lincoln shot down an Iranian Shahed‑139 drone that was aggressively approaching the carrier in the Arabian Sea, roughly 500 miles off Iran’s coast. The intercept came after de‑escalatory measures failed to divert the...

‘Chilling Effect on Safety’: FAA Inspector Says United Slapped Lifetime Ban On Him For Raising Safety Concerns
A Federal Aviation Administration inspector, Paul Asmus, has sued United Airlines, alleging the carrier imposed a lifetime travel ban and filed a civil complaint after he reported safety concerns on a 2022 flight. United allegedly demanded over $3,000 in restitution,...

CNES to Fill Commercial Launch Facility Vacancy Left by MaiaSpace
The French space agency CNES announced a fresh call for launch operators to occupy the vacancy left by MaiaSpace at its new multi‑user ELM (Ensemble de Lancement Multilanceurs) facility in French Guiana. The site, built on the former Diamant launch...

Southwest Airlines Passengers Are Just Discovering There’s a Locked Overhead Bin Just For Crew And They Are Furious
Southwest Airlines has eliminated its free checked‑bag allowance and introduced assigned seating, concentrating carry‑on luggage in the front rows. Passengers in rows two through five find the overhead bins already full, while a locked crew‑only bin above rows two and...

Should Western Tech Giants Partner With Pro-Hamas Network Al Jazeera?
Google Cloud has become the primary technology provider for Al Jazeera’s new AI‑driven news engine, “The Core,” which uses generative AI to draft scripts, retrieve archives, and create visualizations. Critics argue the partnership risks amplifying state‑directed, pro‑Hamas content because Al...

Two Confirmed Killed in Rochdale Cirrus Crash
A Cirrus SR20 light aircraft that departed Birmingham crashed near Littleborough, close to Rochdale, around 11 am. The aircraft’s ballistic recovery system (CAPS) deployed but became snagged on power lines. Police have recovered the bodies of both occupants, confirming two men...

Boeing Surges; Airbus Reloads in Early 2026
Boeing’s early‑2026 delivery pipeline is accelerating, delivering a surge in cash flow as customers accept aircraft and make final payments. Airbus, meanwhile, is reloading its order book after a strong showing at the Singapore Air Show, where new commitments were...

Pentagon Releases Artificial Intelligence Strategy
The Pentagon unveiled an "AI‑first" strategy, appointing the Under Secretary for Research & Engineering as a single chief technology officer with decision authority. The plan centers on seven pace‑setting AI projects that span warfighting, intelligence and enterprise missions, backed by...

Ryanair Faces €5,000 a Day Fines Unless It Stops ‘Pressure Selling’ Tactics On Its Website
A Brussels Enterprise Court ordered Ryanair to halt "pressure selling" tactics on its website, including scarcity alerts, fake discounts, bundled pricing, and hidden baggage fees. The airline has three months to comply or face daily fines of €5,000, up to...

Few Orders Announced Today at Singapore Air Show
The Singapore Air Show on Feb. 3, 2026 delivered a surprisingly thin order book. Boeing and ATR were the only manufacturers to announce new commercial contracts, while Embraer reiterated a previously announced C‑390 tanker‑transport deal. The limited activity highlights a cautious market...

Lockheed Martin Demonstrates Multi-Aircraft Networking with Sniper NTP
Lockheed Martin completed the first flight demonstration of its Sniper Networked Targeting Pod, showing real‑time targeting data exchange between two F‑16 fighters and a ground station. The pod transforms the legacy AN/AAQ‑33 Sniper ATP into a networked node using MANET...

Fourth EU Clean Aviation Funding Proposal Recognises Hydrogen’s Upcoming Importance
The European Union’s Clean Aviation programme has launched its fourth call for proposals, offering up to €329.5 million in public funding, which together with private investment could reach €824 million. The programme concentrates on ultra‑efficient short‑to‑medium range (SMR) aircraft, allocating €130 million to...

Airbus Sold Airlines the Dream of Space Efficiency on the A321 – Two Major Carriers Are Now Reversing Course
Airbus marketed the A321neo family, especially the LR and XLR variants, as ultra‑efficient narrow‑body jets that could deliver wide‑body seat counts with lower operating costs. The design’s space‑saving tricks—most notably the Space Flex lavatory layout—reduced cabin width to add six...

Navigating the New Interregnum
The episode examines the current geopolitical interregnum—a transitional period between the fading Pax Americana and an as‑yet undefined new world order. It highlights how U.S. actions in Venezuela and threats to Greenland have destabilized NATO, prompting speculation about a future...

How a Solar Impulse Spinoff Cleared a Major Battery Certification Hurdle
Swiss startup H55, a Solar Impulse spinoff, announced it has successfully completed a full certification test sequence for its high‑energy propulsion batteries, with the tests witnessed and approved by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA). The milestone proves the...
What to Know About the Department of Defense’s Review of 8(a) and Small Business Awards
The episode explains the Department of Defense's two‑stage review of small‑business and 8(a) contracts over $20 million, aimed at identifying non‑essential awards, excessive pass‑through arrangements, and above‑market pricing. It outlines the tight timeline—stage one due by Jan 31, 2026 and stage two...

Tom Ilube CBE Appointed Chair of LINK
The episode announces Tom Ilube CBE as the new Chair of LINK, the UK’s cash access and ATM network, highlighting his extensive background in technology, finance, education, and philanthropy. Ilube emphasizes the importance of maintaining cash access for millions as...

Regulators at the Heart of the National Payments Vision
In his keynote at the Payments Regulation and Innovation Summit, David Geale, MD of the Payment Systems Regulator, outlined how the FCA and PSR are steering the National Payments Vision by focusing on system trust, resilience through choice, and upcoming...

Inside The Not So Glamorous World Of Flight Attendant ‘Crash Pads’: It Looks Like a Prison
Flight attendants in the U.S. are increasingly forced to live in so‑called “crash pads,” low‑cost shared apartments that resemble dormitories or prisons. The practice stems from low entry‑level pay that makes hotel stays unaffordable, combined with airline bases located in...

AGS Airports Secures £745 Million Refinancing as AIB Joins Lending Syndicate
AGS Airports has secured a £745 million refinancing package, with AIB joining the lending syndicate. The new capital strengthens the group’s balance sheet and funds a slate of upgrades at Aberdeen, Glasgow and Southampton airports, including terminals, runways and energy‑efficiency projects....

Greenland’s Worth a Fight and Russia’s Trying to Start One
Greenland’s position in the GIUK Gap makes it the linchpin for NATO’s ability to detect Russian submarines before they enter the Atlantic, while its Pituffik Space Base hosts critical early‑warning radars for U.S. missile defense. Moscow is exploiting the U.S.‑Europe...

Scarce Reserves
Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Warsh is pushing to restart quantitative tightening, signaling a shift toward shrinking the central bank’s balance sheet. This move comes even as the Fed recently expanded its holdings to ease strains in the funding market. Warsh’s...

Emirates Is Finally Eyeing The Resumption Of Israel Flights After Two Year Suspension
Emirates is reportedly preparing to restart its Dubai‑Tel Aviv service after a two‑year hiatus triggered by the October 7 Hamas attack. Before the suspension the carrier operated three daily flights, a schedule it had expanded only months earlier due to strong...

The Accidental Correspondent: Part 1 — The Strategy of the Sky
Freelance journalist Brian Coleman is attending the 2026 Singapore Airshow using loyalty points to cover the event at no out‑of‑pocket cost. He leveraged Chase Ultimate Rewards and IHG points to secure a United Premium Plus seat and a Holiday Inn...
Russia’s Strategic Brown Water Capabilities: A NATO Blind Spot?
The episode examines Russia’s expanding use of inland waterways—its “brown water” zones—as a strategic platform for long‑range missile strikes, highlighting the 2015 Caspian Sea Kalibr launch as a watershed moment. It explains how the universal 3S14 vertical launch system equipped...

Net Zero by 2050 Is Beyond Reach, but R&D, SAF Work Continues
The International Air Transport Association’s Net Zero by 2050 pledge, announced in 2021, is now widely regarded as unattainable, prompting many airlines to scale back or abandon the targets. Sustainable Aviation Fuel remains the most viable near‑term option, yet its...

Why Is Aviation so Safe?
The episode explores why commercial aviation enjoys an exceptional safety record by examining three economic lenses: market mechanisms that eliminate "lemons" through rigorous aircraft record‑keeping, incentive structures that turn safety into an anti‑Prisoner’s Dilemma where cooperation yields higher profits for...

‘Brain-Searing Pain’: United Airlines Passenger Describes Agonizing Moment Boeing 737’s Pressurization System Broke
A United Airlines Boeing 737‑700 experienced a cabin pressurization failure seconds after takeoff on Jan. 30, causing severe head and ear pain for passengers. The aircraft climbed to about 8,700 feet before pilots descended to 6,600 feet and diverted to Houston for an...

Staff Revolt Forces British Airways to Abandon Plans to Introduce ‘Masculine’ Neck Ties For Female Cabin Crew
British Airways has scrapped its plan to introduce a masculine‑style neck tie for female cabin crew after a swift staff revolt. The airline replaced the controversial frilly scarf designed by Ozwald Boateng with a Hermès‑origin twilly, but initially limited its...