Skip to main content

What happened to Amazon’s inaugural Project Kuiper launch?

Official Imagery for Amazon Project Kuiper.
ULA

Amazon is aiming to take on SpaceX’s Starlink internet service using thousands of its own Project Kuiper satellites in low-Earth orbit.

The first Project Kuiper satellites were suppsoed to launch aboard a United Launch Alliance (ULA) Atlas V rocket from Cape Canaveral in Florida on April 9, but rough weather conditions forced the mission team to scrub the planned liftoff.

Recommended Videos

Since then, it’s all gone a bit quiet, and it’s not clear when the rocket carrying the satellites will be firing up its engines to head skyward.

A couple of news reports in recent days have suggested that the inaugural launch of Amazon’s Project Kuiper has been rescheduled for Monday, April 14 at 7 p.m. ET, but ULA has yet to confirm this on its website and social media channels.

So, for now, those following developments should simply sit tight and wait for an official update from ULA .

Digital Trends has reached out to the spaceflight company for more information and we will update here when we hear back.

Similar to SpaceX’s Starlink service, Project Kuiper will use thousands of satellites in low-Earth orbit to provide fast, reliable internet to customers globally, including those in unserved and underserved communities.

The first deployment, which we can expect to take place if not on Monday then in the next couple of weeks, will send the first batch of 27 Project Kuiper satellites to orbit.

While 27 is the maximum number of Project Kuiper satellites that ULA’s Atlas V rocket can carry in a single mission, its other rocket, the newer Vulcan vehicle, is able to carry up to 45 Amazon satellites in one flight. Blue Origin’s newest rocket, the New Glenn, will also be used for Project Kuiper satellite deployments, giving Amazon several options for building out its constellation.

Project Kuiper is aiming to complete its constellation of more than 3,200 satellites by 2029, enabling global broadband coverage that will allow it to properly challenge Starlink. However, Starlink’s larger fleet and technological head start may well help SpaceX to retain a competitive advantage over Amazon’s Project Kuiper at least into the early 2030s.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Amazon reveals new date for debut Project Kuiper launch
Official Imagery for Amazon Project Kuiper.

Amazon’s inaugural launch of its Project Kuiper internet satellites on April 9 turned out to be nothing of the sort when poor weather conditions prompted the mission team to postpone liftoff.

Up until Thursday, we’d heard nothing from Amazon and United Launch Alliance (ULA) -- the operator of the Atlas V rocket carrying the satellites to orbit -- about a new target launch date. But on Friday, they finally revealed a schedule.

Read more
How to watch Amazon launch its first Project Kuiper satellites
Amazon's Project Kuiper Satellite payload.

Amazon is going into competition with SpaceX, with its Project Kuiper broadband satellite-based internet service intended to rival Starlink. The first launch of Project Kuiper satellites is scheduled for Monday April 28, and if you'd like to watch along at home then the event will be livestreamed.

The launch will use a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket, and will take place at Cape Canaveral Space Force Station in Florida. The mission, named "KA-01", will carry 27 satellites into an orbit 280 miles above the Earth's surface.

Read more
Amazon’s Project Kuiper satellite internet plans take off next week
Official Imagery for Amazon Project Kuiper.

Satellite-based internet has emerged as the next avenue for mobile connectivity. At the moment, Elon Musk-led SpaceX is sitting at the top of the food chain with its Starlink constellation of satellites. From deals with airline carriers for providing in-flight Wi-Fi to partnerships covering mobile devices with T-Mobile, Starlink satellites are now working even in war zones.

It will soon have some hot competition from Amazon. The company has announced that it will launch its first batch of 27 satellites on April 9, as part of the “KA-01” Kuiper Atlas 1 mission. It ks the first full-scale deployment of satellites as part of the ambitious Project Kuiper, which hopes to create a constellation of 3,200 satellites in low-Earth orbit.

Read more