There it goes again: SpaceX’s massive Starship explodes

Jun 20, 2025, updated Jun 20, 2025
Source: X/NASA

SpaceX’s massive Starship spacecraft exploded in a dramatic fireball during testing in Texas, the latest setback for billionaire Elon Musk’s Mars rocket program.

The explosion came 11pm local time on Wednesday while Starship was on a test stand at its Brownsville, Texas Starbase ahead of a 10th test flight, SpaceX said in a post on Musk’s social-media platform X.

The company attributed it to a “major anomaly”, and said all personnel were safe.

“Preliminary data suggests that a nitrogen COPV in the payload bay failed below its proof pressure,” Musk said in a post on X, about a nitrogen gas storage unit known as a composite overwrapped pressure vessel.

“If further investigation confirms that this is what happened, it is the first time ever for this design.”

SpaceX didn’t immediately respond to a request for further comment.

There appeared to be at least two explosions in quick succession of the Starship rocket. They lit up the night sky and sent debris flying, as seen on video capturing the moment it exploded.

The 122-metre tall Starship rocket system is at the core of Musk’s goal of sending humans to Mars. But it has been beset by a string of failures this year.

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In late May, SpaceX’s Starship rocket spun out of control about halfway through a flight without achieving some of its most important testing goals.

The Starship lifted off from SpaceX’s Starbase launch site in Texas, flying beyond the point of two previous explosive attempts earlier this year that sent debris streaking over Caribbean islands and forced dozens of airliners to divert course.

Two months earlier, the spacecraft exploded in space minutes after lifting off from Texas, prompting the US Federal Aviation Administration to halt air traffic in parts of Florida.

Videos on social media showed fiery debris streaking through the dusk skies near south Florida and the Bahamas after Starship broke up in space shortly after it began to spin uncontrollably with its engines cut off, a SpaceX live stream of the mission showed. Musk called that explosion “a minor setback”.

The FAA said earlier this month that it had closed an agency-required investigation into the mishap, citing the probable cause as a hardware failure in one of the engines.

SpaceX identified eight corrective actions to prevent a recurrence. The FAA said it verified SpaceX implemented those prior to the late May Starship mission.

In January, a Starship rocket broke up in space minutes after launching from Texas, raining debris over Caribbean islands and causing minor damage to a car in the Turks and Caicos Islands.

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