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This is a cached version of https://theregister.com/2026/02/09/spacex_resumes_falcon_9 from 2/28/2026, 4:06:09 PM.

SpaceX resumes Falcon 9 launches after second-stage mishap • The Register

: FAA signs off on rocket's return and CEO floats ambitious lunar settlement plan

Sign in / up The Register Science 37 SpaceX back to Falcon 9 launches as Musk blathers about Moon city 37 FAA signs off on rocket's return and CEO floats ambitious lunar settlement plan Richard Speed Mon 9 Feb 2026 // 14:23 UTC SpaceX resumed launching Falcon 9 rockets this weekend after last week's second stage incident. At the same time, CEO Elon Musk claimed that the company has shifted its focus from Mars to "building a self-growing city on the Moon" within a decade. The second stage issue, which resulted in a failed deorbit burn and subsequent reentry over the Southern Indian Ocean, was due to "an off-nominal condition caused by a failed ignition due to a gas bubble in the transfer tube ahead of the planned deorbit burn." Launches of the workhorse rocket were halted while an investigation took place. Shortly after, the US Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) told The Register: "The FAA will oversee every step of the investigation, approve the final report and any corrective actions." A few days later, the FAA gave SpaceX the nod to resume launches and said in a statement: "The FAA oversaw and accepted the findings of the SpaceX-led investigation. The final mishap report cites the probable root cause as the Falcon 9 stage 2 engine's failure to ignite before the deorbit burn. "SpaceX identified technical and organizational preventative measures to avoid a reoccurrence of the event. The Falcon 9 vehicle is authorized to return to flight." So all good? Kind of. On February 7, at 2058 UTC, SpaceX launched another 25 Starlink satellites from Vandenberg. The successful mission cleared the path for the upcoming Crew-12 mission, but far greater challenges lie ahead. These were articulated in a post on X (formerly Twitter) by Musk, who wrote: "SpaceX has already shifted focus to building a self-growing city on the Moon, as we can potentially achieve that in less than 10 years, whereas Mars would take 20+ years." SpaceX wants to fill Earth orbit with a million datacenter satellites SpaceX halts Falcon 9 flights after second stage anomaly Elon Musk merges xAI into SpaceX to spread universal consciousness via a sentient sun SpaceX loses debut V3 Super Heavy in ground test mishap The word "potentially" is doing a lot of heavy lifting. SpaceX was awarded a contract in 2021 to build a lunar lander variant of its Starship rocket. However, a few short years later, NASA admitted that the company was behind schedule and reopened the competition for the landing contract, with a view to getting boots on the Moon's surface by the end of Trump's second term in 2029. SpaceX responded with a progress update that was heavy on renders and mock-ups but light on actual details. At the end of January, Jeff Bezos' Blue Origin announced it would pause its New Shepard flights and shift resources to accelerate the development of the company's lunar capabilities. In 2023, Blue Origin unveiled a cargo version mock-up of its Blue Moon lunar lander. The prospect of the company accelerating the development of the human-rated model cannot be far from Musk's thoughts. However, given that SpaceX has yet to put a Starship into orbit (though it might finally do so this year), Musk's "less than 10 years" is optimistic, even if the funding spigot is turned on. ® Share More about Aerospace Moon SpaceX More like these × More about Aerospace Moon SpaceX Starlink Narrower topics Aviation Blue Origin Boeing Exomoon Broader topics Elon Musk Space More about Share More about Aerospace Moon SpaceX More like these × More about Aerospace Moon SpaceX Starlink Narrower topics Aviation Blue Origin Boeing Exomoon Broader topics Elon Musk Space TIP US OFF Send us news Other stories you might like Denizens of DEF CON are 'fed up with government' Interview Jake Braun thinks hackers need to create a 'Digital arsenal of democracy' to defend us all Research28 Feb 2026 | Open source devs consider making hogs pay for every Git pull Opinion Careless big-time users are treating FOSS repos like content delivery networks Databases28 Feb 2026 | Double whammy: Steaelite RAT bundles data theft, ransomware in one evil tool Credential and cryptocurrency theft, live surveillance, ransomware - an attacker's Swiss Army knife Cyber-crime27 Feb 2026 | Resilient, continuously active data – with no compromise When the gap between data generation and action is a strategic liability, it's time for a fix Sponsored Feature Trump orders purge of 'woke' Anthropic from government updated Without a single 'You're Fired' joke Public Sector27 Feb 2026 | PCs and phones to get more boring and expensive in 2026 thanks to memory drought 'This is perhaps the biggest challenge the industry has faced since its inception' Systems27 Feb 2026 | Amazon and Nvidia open their wallets to lock in OpenAI's business while SoftBank keeps the lights on ChatGPT maker announces $110B in new investment amid flurry of self-serving deals AI + ML27 Feb 2026 | Suspected Nork digital intruders caught breaking into US healthcare, education orgs Who is knocking at the Dohdoor? 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