List of Ariane launches |
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1979–1989 · 1990–1999 · 2000–2009 · 2010–2019 · 2020–2029 |
This is a list of launches performed or scheduled to be performed by Ariane launch vehicles between 2020 and 2029. During this time, the Ariane 5 was retired in favour of the Ariane 6 rocket.
Flight No. | Date Time (UTC) |
Rocket type Serial No. |
Launch site | Payload | Payload mass | Orbit | Customers | Launch outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VA251 | 16 January 2020 21:05 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5110 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Eutelsat Konnect GSAT-30 |
6,976 kg | GTO | Eutelsat ISRO |
Success[citation needed] |
Eutelsat communications satellite and ISRO communications satellite. | ||||||||
VA252 | 18 February 2020 22:18 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5111 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
JCSAT-17 GEO-KOMPSAT 2B |
9,236 kg | GTO | SKY Perfect JSAT KARI |
Success[citation needed] |
SKY Perfect JSAT communications satellite and KARI meteorological satellite. | ||||||||
VA253 | 15 August 2020 22:04 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5112 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Galaxy 30 MEV-2 BSAT-4b |
9,703 kg | GTO | Intelsat Northrop Grumman BSAT |
Success |
Flight VA253 was planned to launch in June 2020.[1] However, launch campaign activities were significantly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. To prevent the spread in French Guiana and protect Centre Spatial Guyanais employees, all launch activities were suspended on 16 March 2020.[2][3][4] Operations for Vega flight VV16 and Ariane 5 flight VA253 could not resume until 28 April 2020.[5][6][7] VA253 activities were listed among the top priorities at the reopening of the Guiana Space Center on 11 May 2020.[8] The launch was rescheduled for end of July 2020[6][9][10] to place the satellites into a geostationary transfer orbit from which they will eventually be placed into geostationary orbit through their own propulsion. The flight was again aborted on 28 July 2020, due to a "red" warning in the system, resulting from a sensor problem related to LH2 tank on the core stage.
American satellite operator Intelsat and Japanese Broadcasting Satellite System Corporation (B-SAT) are the customers for Ariane flight VA253.[11][12] Galaxy 30 is a communications satellite built by Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems (formerly Orbital ATK) on the GEOStar-2 platform for Intelsat. It has C-band, Ku-band, Ka-band payloads, as well as a WAAS payload for a mass of 3,325 kilograms (7,330 lb).[13] Built in satellite manufacturing facility in Dulles, Virginia, it will primarily serve video markets in North America.[14] As per Intelsat/Arianespace contract announced in January 2018,[15] Galaxy 30 would share the upper berth of the Ariane 5 ECA rocket with MEV-2, which is a Northrop Grumman second satellite servicing vehicle, identical to MEV-1. With a mass of 2,326 kilograms (5,128 lb), it would begin a five-year mission to extend the lifetime of Intelsat 10-02.[16] MEV-2 received FCC authorization on 25 March 2020.[17] BSAT-4b is the second communications satellite of the fourth generation B-SAT, built by SSL (company) on its SSL 1300 platform. It has 24 Ku-band transponders and mass of 3,520 kilograms (7,760 lb).[18] |
Flight No. | Date Time (UTC) |
Rocket type Serial No. |
Launch site | Payload | Payload mass | Orbit | Customers | Launch outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VA254 | 30 July 2021 21:00 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5113 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Eutelsat Quantum Star One D2 |
10,515 kg | GTO | Eutelsat Star One |
Success |
Brazilian Satellite operator Embratel and European Eutelsat were customers on the VA254 flight.[19]
Eutelsat Quantum is a European re-programmable telecommunications satellite equipped with Ku-band payload, developed in a public-private partnership between the European Space Agency (ESA), Eutelsat and Airbus Defence and Space.[16] It had a launch mass of approximately 3,461 kilograms (7,630 lb) and a design lifetime of 15 years.[20] Star One D2 is a telecommunications satellite equipped with C-, Ku-, Ka- and X-band payloads for high-speed telecommunications, television broadcast and fast broadband in South America, Mexico, Central America, and parts of the Atlantic Ocean.[13] It had a launch mass of approximately 6,190 kilograms (13,650 lb) and a design lifetime of 15 years.[20] The target orbit was a geosynchronous transfer orbit with an apogee altitude of 250 kilometres (160 mi) and a perigee altitude of 35,726 kilometres (22,199 mi), at an inclination of 3°.[20] The mission was planned to last 36 minutes and 24 seconds.[20][a] | ||||||||
VA255 | 24 October 2021 02:10 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5115 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
SES-17 Syracuse 4A |
10,264 kg | GTO | SES S.A. DGA |
Success |
SES S.A. communications satellite and Direction générale de l'armement military communications satellite. | ||||||||
VA256 | 25 December 2021 12:20 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5114 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
James Webb Space Telescope | 6,161.4 kg | Sun–Earth L2 | NASA / ESA / CSA / STScI | Success |
James Webb Space Telescope. |
Flight No. | Date Time (UTC) |
Rocket type Serial No. |
Launch site | Payload | Payload mass | Orbit | Customers | Launch outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VA257 | 22 June 2022 21:50 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5116 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
MEASAT-3d GSAT-24 |
9,829 kg | GTO | MEASAT NSIL / Tata Play |
Success |
MEASAT communications satellite and NSIL communications satellite. | ||||||||
VA258 | 7 September 2022 21:45 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5117 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Eutelsat Konnect VHTS | 6,400 kg | GTO | Eutelsat | Success |
Eutelsat communications satellite. | ||||||||
VA259 | 13 December 2022 20:30 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5118 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Galaxy 35 Galaxy 36 MTG-I1 |
10,972 kg | GTO | Intelsat EUMETSAT |
Success |
Two Intelsat communications satellites and EUMETSAT meteorological satellite. |
Flight No. | Date Time (UTC) |
Rocket type Serial No. |
Launch site | Payload | Payload mass | Orbit | Customers | Launch outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VA260 | 14 April 2023 12:14 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5120 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer (JUICE) | 5,963 kg | Jovicentric | ESA | Success |
Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer. | ||||||||
VA261 | 5 July 2023 22:00 |
Ariane 5 ECA+ 5119 |
Guiana ELA-3 |
Syracuse 4B (Comsat-NG 2)[22] Heinrich Hertz (H2Sat) |
6,950 kg[23] | GTO | DGA DLR |
Success |
Ariane 5's last mission.[24] |
Flight No. | Date Time (UTC) |
Rocket type Serial No. |
Launch site | Payload | Payload mass | Orbit | Customers | Launch outcome |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
VA262 | 9 July 2024 19:00 |
Ariane 62 L6001[25] |
Guiana ELA-4 |
Multiple rideshare payloads | 1,600 kg[26] | LEO | Various | Partial failure |
Maiden flight of Ariane 6. It was a flight test carrying a mass simulator plus a number of small cubesats and other experiments as rideshare payloads. Rocket launched successfully to orbit and upper stage performed a second burn to release cubesats. During attempt to perform a third burn to deorbit the upper stage, the rocket's auxiliary propulsion system failed. This failure prevented the upper stage from relighting.[27][28][29][30] |
Date Time (UTC) |
Type | Payload | Orbit | Customers | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
26 February 2025 16:24[31] |
Ariane 62 VA263 |
CSO-3 | SSO | CNES / DGA | ||
French military reconnaissance satellite. | ||||||
August 2025[32] | Ariane 62 VA264[33] |
MetOp-SG-A1 | SSO | EUMETSAT | ||
2025[34] | Ariane 62 | Galileo FOC FM 29, 30 | MEO | ESA | ||
2H 2025[35] | Ariane 64 | Project Kuiper (30+ satellites) | LEO | Kuiper Systems | ||
First Ariane 64 launch and first Ariane launch for Project Kuiper | ||||||
2H 2025[36] | Ariane 62 |
Sentinel-1D | SSO | ESA | ||
2026[37][34] | Ariane 62 | Galileo FOC FM 28, 31 | MEO | ESA | ||
2026[37][34] | Ariane 62 | Galileo FOC FM 33, 34 | MEO | ESA | ||
Q2 2026[38] | Ariane 64 | Intelsat 45 | GTO | Intelsat | ||
June-August 2026[32] | Ariane 64[39] | MetOp-SGB1 | Polar | EUMETSAT | ||
Q3 2026[40] | Ariane 64[41] | MTG-I2[42] | GTO | EUMETSAT | ||
Q4 2026[43] | Ariane 64 | Multi-Launch Service (MLS) #1 rideshare mission | GTO | TBA | ||
2026[44] | Ariane 6 | Galileo G2 1, 2 | MEO | ESA | ||
2026[45][46] | Ariane 64 | Intelsat 41, 44 | GTO | Intelsat | ||
Q4 2026[47][48] | Ariane 62[49] | PLATO | Sun–Earth L2 | ESA | ||
2026[50][51] | Ariane 64 | Uhura-1 (Node-1)[52] | GTO | Skyloom | ||
Q4 2027[43] | Ariane 64 | MLS #2 rideshare mission | GTO | TBA | ||
2027[53][54] | Ariane 64 | Optus-11 | GTO | Optus | ||
2027[55] | Ariane 64 | Earth Return Orbiter | Areocentric | ESA | ||
2027[44] | Ariane 6 | Galileo G2 3, 4 | MEO | ESA | ||
2027[56] | Ariane 6 | Hellas Sat 5 | GTO | Hellas Sat | ||
Q4 2028[43] | Ariane 64 | MLS #3 rideshare mission | GTO | TBA | ||
Q3 2029[43] | Ariane 64 | MLS #4 rideshare mission | GTO | TBA | ||
2029[57] | Ariane 62 | ARIEL, Comet Interceptor | Sun–Earth L2 | ESA | ||
2031[58] | Ariane 64 | Argonaut Mission 1 | TLI | ESA | ||
2035[59] | Ariane 64[60] | Athena | Sun–Earth L2, Halo orbit |
ESA | ||
2035[61] | Ariane 6 | LISA | Heliocentric | ESA | ||
TBD[62] | Ariane 64 | 17 more launches of Project Kuiper (35–40 satellites)[63] | LEO | Kuiper Systems | ||
TBD[64] | Ariane 62 | Electra | GTO | SES S.A. / ESA | ||
TBD[64] | Ariane 62 | Eutelsat ×3 | GTO | Eutelsat |
Some 6 rockets are currently at different stages of production, including the first A64, which is due to take off in the second half of 2025 to deploy a batch of more than 30 satellites on behalf of Kuiper, the Amazon constellation.
Our plan is to launch the product into space by 2026.