
A launch pad at Russia’s main space complex was damaged during Thursday’s launch of a mission carrying two Russians and an American to the International Space Station, Moscow’s space agency announced.
The Soyuz MS-28 spacecraft successfully docked with the space station and the three crew members had boarded, Roscosmos said.
But a post-launch inspection at the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan revealed “damage to several elements of the launch pad,” according to a statement from Roscosmos, which still uses the space facility in its former Soviet neighbor.
“An assessment of the condition of the launch complex is currently underway,” it said, adding that all parts needed to repair the pad are available.
“The damage will be repaired in the near future.”
The launch pad contains support systems for the rocket and a structure that allows cosmonauts to access their capsule as it sits atop a Soyuz rocket.
Launch pads must be capable of withstanding extreme heat, air pressure and vibrations as a rocket takes flight.
Russian analysts said repairs to the launch pad could take a week or longer. And any lengthy delay could leave Russia unable to launch missions to the space station, they said.
“In the worst case this could seriously affect the rotation of crewed missions and cargo flights to the ISS,” analyst and blogger Georgy Trishkin wrote on Telegram.
Typically, ISS crew are launched roughly every six months from Baikonur.
“This is the only launch pad Roscosmos uses for the ISS program, and in the future it was supposed to be used for launches to the Russian Orbital Station,” commentator Vitaliy Egorov wrote on Telegram.
“In effect from this day Russia has lost the ability to launch humans into space, something that has not happened since 1961. Now it will be necessary to quickly repair this launch table or modernize another one,” Egorov wrote.
Besides Russia’s Soyuz craft, NASA uses SpaceX’s Dragon spacecraft to take crew to the ISS.
The three men aboard the mission that lifted off Thursday join seven other crew already orbiting on the ISS.
Three are scheduled to return to Earth by December 8, according to NASA.
For more CNN news and newsletters create an account at CNN.com
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Sources: IDF does not actually know how many ballistic missiles Iran has left - 2
Defeating An inability to embrace success in Scholarly world: Individual Victories - 3
Proficient Cultivating Devices for a Lovely and Useful Nursery in 2024 - 4
The Advancement and Effect of Dental Embed Innovation on Oral Wellbeing - 5
As tetanus vaccination rates decline, doctors worry about rising case numbers
Artemis II astronauts make long-distance call to the space station as they head home from the moon
Innospace's rocket crashes in first commercial launch in Brazil; shares tumble
Jill Hennessy was a '90s TV staple. Now she's in her fearless era.
St George Mining hits record 178m high-grade intercept at Araxá, reinforcing global scale
People are getting their news from AI – and it’s altering their views
Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) breaks apart in incredible telescope photos
An Extended period of Voyaging Carefully: the World with Reason
Careful Nurturing: Techniques for Bringing up Tough Children
‘Ukrainian housewives’ and Skyranger delays – German defense poster child Rheinmetall is in hot water













