What Happened: Falcon 9 Upper Stage Anomaly Grounds Starlink Launches
On February 2, 2026, a Falcon 9 successfully launched 25 Starlink satellites to low Earth orbit (LEO) from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The first stage landed flawlessly on a droneship, but the upper stage failed to execute its planned deorbit burn, resulting in an uncontrolled reentry and crash back to Earth. SpaceX immediately grounded the Falcon 9 fleet pending an FAA-required anomaly investigation. This event echoes three prior upper-stage issues: a July 2024 liquid oxygen leak deploying satellites too low, a September 2024 off-nominal deorbit during Crew-9, and a February 2025 uncontrolled reentry after another Starlink mission.[1]
Technical and Commercial Logic: Reliability vs. Launch Cadence Pressures
Falcon 9's upper stage, powered by a single Merlin 1D Vacuum engine, handles payload deployment and controlled disposal to mitigate space debris. The deorbit failure likely stems from propulsion anomalies, as seen in past leaks or burn deviations, occurring amid SpaceX's aggressive cadence of over 240 launches in 19 months—most Starlink-focused. Commercially, Starlink relies on this rhythm to scale its 9,500-satellite constellation, serving 9 million users with global broadband. Grounding disrupts the February 13 Starlink mission from SLC-40 and risks Crew-12's February 11 ISS launch, originally fast-tracked from February 15 to address ISS staffing shortages post-Crew-11's early medical return. Historical FAA investigations averaged two weeks (e.g., July 2024 clearance by July 25), suggesting a potential return around February 16—slipping Crew-12 by days but preserving Starlink's momentum.[1][3]
Amid rumors, Elon Musk denied SpaceX is developing a Starlink phone, refocusing priorities on satellite expansion and direct-to-device tech with 650 dedicated satellites, not hardware ventures.[2][4]
OrbiMars Exclusive Analysis: Starlink's Pivot to Starship Imperative
These recurrent upper-stage failures—four in 19 months despite 99%+ success—expose Falcon 9's limits as Starlink scales to millions of users and competes with Amazon's Kuiper. Each grounding erodes launch slots critical for constellation refresh and V3 satellite deployments with enhanced direct-to-cell capabilities. For investors, this underscores urgency for Starship: fully reusable, 100+ ton LEO capacity per flight versus Falcon 9's 22 tons, enabling weekly mega-constellation builds. Crew-12 delays minimally impact Starlink revenue but signal FAA scrutiny tightening post-medical evacuations. OrbiMars view: SpaceX must accelerate Starship Block 2 orbital refueling tests in 2026 to de-risk Falcon dependency, securing Starlink's lead in the $20B+ satellite internet market. Users face no service dips, but expect moderated capacity growth until Q2 resolutions.[1][2]