Particle.news
Download on the App Store

Baikonur Pad Collapse Grounds Russian Soyuz and Progress Launches to the ISS

NASA reports the ISS has adequate reboost capability during Roscosmos’ ongoing damage assessment.

Overview

  • Drone imagery shows the pad’s mobile maintenance cabin lying mangled in the flame trench after the November 27 Soyuz MS-28 liftoff, though the three-person crew arrived safely at the ISS.
  • Site 31/6 is Russia’s only crew-certified Baikonur pad since Gagarin’s Start was retired, leaving no immediately available certified alternative for Soyuz crews or Progress propellant flights.
  • Roscosmos says spare parts are available and repairs will start soon but has given no timeline, and the Progress MS-33 resupply mission is reported delayed from December 21 to next year.
  • Independent analysts warn restoration could take many months to up to two years, with early technical hypotheses pointing to failed securing mechanisms or pressure effects that dislodged the platform.
  • NASA says it is coordinating closely with partners and expects no near-term impact to station attitude control or reboost, while noting only Progress can deliver propellant to the Russian segment.