Crucial test of Europe's long-delayed Ariane 6 rocket delayed

 a white rocket on a launch pad
a white rocket on a launch pad

Hotfire testing of the new Ariane 6 rocket has been delayed due to problems with ground equipment.

Test firing of the huge Ariane 6 rocket's core stage did not take place as planned on Aug. 29 at Europe's spaceport in Kourou, French Guiana, the European Space Agency announced via X (formerly known as Twitter) a day later.

The cause was a technical issue affecting the control system that governs the rocket's critical fluid operations, used for filling the launcher and the automated countdown. "Specialists are working on a solution. The next attempt is planned for 5 September 2023," the ESA post read.

Related: See Europe's powerful new Ariane 6 rocket on launch pad (photos)

The short hotfire test will see the rocket's Vulcain 2.1 engine fire for a matter of seconds. A longer test firing is planned for Sept. 26, despite the delay, while the rocket's upper stage will go through a third hot-firing test at the German aerospace agency DLR's technical center in Lampoldshausen on Sept. 1, according to an Aug. 9 ESA statement.

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Earlier this month the CEO of France-based company Arianespace confirmed that the inaugural launch of the new Ariane 6 heavy-lift rocket will slip into 2024.

Ariane 6 was initially planned to begin flying in 2020 and replace the aging Ariane 5. That rocket has since retired, launching for the final time in July. This, coupled with the grounding of the Vega C rocket following a failure last year, means Europe is currently without independent access to space.