Musk keeps US plan to return to the Moon in suspense after a year of no progress with Starship.

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Musk keeps US plan to return to the Moon in suspense after a year of no progress with Starship.

Musk keeps US plan to return to the Moon in suspense after a year of no progress with Starship.

SpaceX has managed to catch its breath after three consecutive tests in which its flagship exploded in mid-flight and the loss of another vehicle during pre-launch trials. This Wednesday, the tenth test flight of the Starship mega-rocket has returned it, approximately, to the square it was in June 2024, when for the first time it managed to get both the Super Heavy booster and the upper ship Ship to complete their suborbital flight and return to Earth without exploding: they gently landed in the Atlantic and Indian Oceans, respectively, after taking off from the space base of Elon Musk's space company on the coast of Texas (USA). At launch, the two parts of Starship together form an imposing 121-meter-high assembly, equivalent to a 30-story building.

That achievement is no small feat. Starship is not only the tallest and most powerful craft in the history of the space race, but also the first orbital-class shuttle to successfully land its upper stage—the craft itself—back on Earth in a vertical and controlled position, powered by its own engines. Of course, this major milestone for an orbital spacecraft comes with a significant catch: the craft has yet to reach Earth orbit. And that is essential for Starship to achieve its two most ambitious goals, which are to fulfill Musk's promise of flying to Mars in 2026 and landing NASA astronauts on the Moon in 2027, culminating the return of humans to Earth's satellite 55 years after the last Apollo mission.

“It’s been a great day for NASA and our commercial partners in space,” acting NASA Administrator Sean Duffy said on social media, congratulating the SpaceX team and saying that “the success of Flight 10 paves the way for the Starship HLS [human landing system] that will take American astronauts back to the Moon on the Artemis 3 mission.”

The truth is that, in its latest test to date, Starship hasn't achieved any significant milestones it hasn't achieved before. And since SpaceX hasn't revealed any timeline for the tests it intends to conduct until its Starship becomes a safe human lunar lander, it's impossible to realistically know if it will achieve this by the currently planned Artemis 3 launch date, which will be mid-2027 at the earliest . Meanwhile, China has announced that it will land its first astronauts on the lunar surface in 2030.

These are the achievements of Elon Musk's mega-rocket, and the major challenges ahead, so that it can help the US win the first major space race of the 21st century, aimed at achieving a sustained human presence on the Moon:

What has Starship Flight 10 achieved?

First of all, it aims to break a streak of three failed tests, all previously conducted in 2025, which ended with the explosion of at least the upper Ship. The last test was in May, during test flight 9, and the tenth test couldn't be carried out until three months later because the ship SpaceX was preparing exploded on the ground in June, causing significant damage to the Starbase space base that Elon Musk's space company has in Texas (USA).

This Wednesday's test was the first Starship test since Musk ended his political adventure as Trump's advisor in the White House. In addition to once again performing a soft landing of the two parts of the space shuttle—something SpaceX had already achieved in 2024 during tests 4, 5, and 6—the Starship managed to ignite one of its Raptor engines in space this Wednesday. It had also previously achieved this on flight 6, last November; and this maneuver is crucial for the ship to be able to stabilize its trajectory and enter low Earth orbit in the future. This is always the first step, whether for traveling through space, sending unmanned probes there, or simply deploying satellites that will remain orbiting the Earth. In addition, a ship already in orbit needs to ignite its engines to make the always necessary corrections to its trajectory and also to be able to begin its descent back to Earth's surface.

Starship's tenth test also served to achieve something new for the craft: simulating the release of satellites into space, using a device inspired by the Pez dispenser. This time, they weren't real satellites, but life-size models, and they didn't orbit Earth because this flight was suborbital: they followed a parabolic trajectory and fell minutes later, disintegrating upon re-entry into the atmosphere.

Additionally, SpaceX made multiple modifications to the return trajectory of the booster and upper craft, designed to achieve more efficient returns and to gather data to improve those phases of flight in upcoming tests. In that sense, the Super Heavy booster did not return to base and was not caught by the giant robotic grippers of the same launch tower — which it did do in tests 5, 7 and 8, in October 2024, and in January and March 2025 — because this time that was not the flight plan.

What's Starship's next big challenge?

For Musk's plans to take Starship to the Moon and Mars to be viable, the next critical step is getting the upper craft into orbit—and SpaceX would score a hopeful goal if it can achieve that milestone before the end of 2025. That won't happen on the next test flight, number 11, which should be in the coming weeks if SpaceX wants to get back on track with launches following its near-success Wednesday.

On Flight 10, the main problem was that part of the aft section of the craft appeared to explode at 47 minutes into the flight. Also, some of the craft's fins were damaged during re-entry, but it still managed to land safely in the Indian Ocean. It was expected that both the craft and the booster exploded after completing their splashdowns.

Flight 11 will be the last for version 2 of the Ship spacecraft. This second generation was intended to consolidate the achievements of the first, but SpaceX engineers needed four attempts to stabilize it during flight. According to the space company's own investigations, the problems of the previous failed flights—and the other explosion on the ground—were due to various structural issues that led to depressurization and large fuel leaks.

After a year of no progress, Musk and NASA's hopes for the craft to finally reach Earth orbit are pinned on version 3 of the upper section of Starship, which is expected to take off for the first time in test 12 scheduled for this fall, according to the few details of its plans leaked by SpaceX.

An artist's impression of the Starship HLS, which SpaceX is working on with NASA to transport astronauts between lunar orbit and the surface of the Moon during the Artemis 3 and Artemis 4 missions.
An artist's impression of Starship HLS, which SpaceX is working on with NASA to transport astronauts between lunar orbit and the surface of the Moon during the Artemis 3 and Artemis 4 missions. NASA

The only active rockets that rival some of Starship's capabilities are NASA's SLS—disposable and costly to manufacture—and the New Glenn from the space company Blue Origin , owned by fellow billionaire Jeff Bezos. Both space shuttles have already reached low-Earth orbit; they did so during their maiden test flights, in November 2022 and January 2025 , respectively. But as of today, neither can carry a spacecraft capable of landing humans on the surface of the Moon. Starship is the US's only chance to get back there before China arrives.

What improvements do you need to get to the Moon?

The third generation of the upper Ship craft—which will also carry the new Raptor 3 engines—will also be equipped with the necessary systems for refueling in Earth orbit. In order for it to fire its engines and blast off toward the Moon, or Mars, SpaceX needs to refill the ship's tanks once it has stabilized in space. Because to get a ship of this size—version 3 will reach 70 meters in height—out of Earth's gravity, its fuel tanks cannot be full.

SpaceX's innovative idea is to launch multiple service ships that gradually refuel the main ship. But such a volume of fuel transfer in space has never been achieved before, especially with methane, a propellant rarely used in space rockets until now.

Elon Musk: We'll hopefully demonstrate orbital propellant transfer next year.

"One of the other technologies that's key for Mars is doing orbital propellant transfer. So you can think of this like similar to aerial refueling for airplanes, but in this case it's orbital refilling… pic.twitter.com/gzwrVLaiGH

— ELON CLIPS (@ElonClipsX) June 12, 2025

To pull off this in-orbit refueling without wasting multiple spacecraft and rockets, SpaceX also needs to perfect booster recovery and reuse—the one recovered on Test Flight 7 flew again on Flight 9, but exploded—and also something it has never been able to do: achieve the same with the upper spacecraft.

Elon Musk stated last May that SpaceX could attempt to achieve these milestones in 2026, a year later than intended. With these major improvements, Starship will theoretically be able to travel through the solar system. In practice, the system used by SpaceX for its development suggests that numerous tests will be necessary to refine details. Even if Musk's aerospace company were able to resume the pace of progress with its ship that it had in 2024 and manage to have these capabilities ready in 2027, NASA will need prior landing and takeoff tests on the Moon without a crew. Only then will the ship be approved for use with astronauts on the Artemis missions.

But Musk and his team aren't the only ones with responsibilities. They're responsible for making the final leg of the journey possible: landing astronauts from lunar orbit to the surface. Before that, NASA must successfully transport astronauts to lunar orbit in its Orion capsule, something that is planned to happen during the Artemis 2 mission in 2026, unless further delays continue to accumulate.

And Mars? Can we fly there in 2026?

In the case of traveling to Mars, Musk's true dream —and where the magnate himself promises to send unmanned missions by the end of 2026—the challenge is even more complex and costly. Even if Starship were to arrive ready for space travel in that next Martian launch window, reaching the Red Planet's orbit is one thing; successfully landing there is another, far more complex. Robotic Martian exploration has seen numerous failed landing attempts: only NASA and the Chinese space agency have achieved complete success.

So, following its trial-and-error strategy, SpaceX plans to launch several Starships to Mars in 2026 —for various tests—and to have its version of the lunar craft ready for the Artemis 3 mission in 2027 to meet its commitments to its main customer, NASA. Such advances, in such a short time and across two colossal and different projects at the same time, would far surpass SpaceX's historic achievements in recent years.

For starters, Musk's space company should be able to dramatically increase its launch pace: of the 10 Starship tests to date, two were in 2023, four in 2024, and, so far, another four in 2025. Five successes and five failed tests are the tally so far for the largest and most ambitious rocket in the history of the space race.

EL PAÍS

EL PAÍS

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