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SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin

SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin

2025-11-25SpaceX
Summary

Today's podcast discussed SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin related topics, providing deep analysis and insights.

In 30 seconds

  • Today's podcast discussed SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin related topics, providing deep analysis and insights.
  • Author: Will Lockett Publication Date: November 19, 2025 Article URL: https://www.
  • “Work hard in silence; let your success be the noise” is a phrase Elon Musk has never heard.
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Published
11/19/2025
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1 cited
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5 min listen
Published
11/19/2025
Publisher
Language
Sources
1 cited
Listen
5 min listen

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  • Today's podcast discussed SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin related topics, providing deep analysis and insights.
  • Author: Will Lockett Publication Date: November 19, 2025 Article URL: https://www.
  • “Work hard in silence; let your success be the noise” is a phrase Elon Musk has never heard.
  • Author: Will Lockett

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11/19/2025
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What happened

Today's podcast discussed SpaceX Should Be Extremely Worried About Blue Origin related topics, providing deep analysis and insights.

“Work hard in silence; let your success be the noise” is a phrase Elon Musk has never heard. Everything he does is spectacle over substance. It is all about the hype and perception of a thing, not whether it will actually work. You can see this with the Hyperloop, FSD, Grok, the Cybertruck, and the Tesla Bot.

But there is no greater display of this than Starship. It is a spectacle on a scale never seen before, yet even after so many launches, it has failed in almost every conceivable way. By comparison, Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin has definitely heard this phrase. They have been astonishingly quiet about their latest rocket, New Glenn.

In fact, they have only just conducted their second-ever launch. However, the astounding success of that launch should give SpaceX a few sleepless nights, as it perfectly demonstrates that Blue Origin is preparing to leapfrog SpaceX.So, let’s look at the details of this incredible launch.New Glenn’s previous launch was a partial success, placing a prototype satellite into medium-Earth orbit but failing to land its reusable first stage.

However, getting a payload into orbit on their first attempt was so damn impressive that NASA greenlighted the launch of their twin-probe ESCAPADE Mars mission on the next New Glenn flight.On November 13th, New Glenn successfully launched and delivered the ESCAPADE probes on their journey to Mars without a hitch and perfectly landed the first stage, proving New Glenn is a highly competent and economically viable launch vehicle.

Blue Origin’s Ariane Cornell phrased it best during the launch stream when she said, “We are open for business, baby, on New Glenn!”But why should SpaceX be scared? Their Starship is a very different and far larger rocket, meaning that they aren’t competitors. Right?Well, don’t forget that Starship was supposed to have 100+ tons of payload capacity to Low Earth Orbit (LEO) from the get-go, yet even after iterating the design over more than ten launches, it currently sits at less than 35 tons to LEO, which is ten tons less than New Glenn.

Musk has recognised that Starship needs a complete redesign, so he is launching unplanned Versions 2 and 3 of Starship soon and has claimed that they will have payloads of 150 tons and 200 tons to LEO, respectively. However, there is absolutely no reason to trust these claims. What’s more, even after 11 test flights, no Starship has ever even reached orbit, let alone placed a payload into orbit.

So, while they might seem like very different rockets for very different uses, that isn’t true. As it stands, New Glen has a much larger payload and is significantly more capable and reliable.And what if I told you that New Glenn is cheaper than anything SpaceX has to offer?NASA paid New Glenn $20 million for this launch, though some sources estimate the price at $55 million.

That means New Glen costs $444 to $1,222 per kg to LEO (with its 45-ton payload to LEO).SpaceX’s closest working competitor is the Falcon Heavy. SpaceX tends to hide and underestimate launch costs; for example, they still quote the fully reusable price for a Falcon Heavy launch, even though none have launched with that setup in six years, and none are scheduled to either.

But the Falcon Heavy recently launched NASA’s Europa Clipper mission to Jupiter, which is a comparable contract to the ESCAPADE launch, giving us a verified comparison point. NASA handed SpaceX $178 million for this launch. In this partially “expendable” configuration, Falcon Heavy has a payload to LEO of 57 tons, meaning a price tag of $3,122 per kg to LEO.

So, SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy is around three times as expensive as New Glenn!Okay, so what about Starship?

News Source11/19/2025
Read original at News Source

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Author: Will Lockett

Publication Date: November 19, 2025

Full source content

“Work hard in silence; let your success be the noise” is a phrase Elon Musk has never heard. Everything he does is spectacle over substance. It is all about the hype and perception of a thing, not whether it will actually work. You can see this with the Hyperloop, FSD, Grok, the Cybertruck, and the Tesla Bot.

But there is no greater display of this than Starship. It is a spectacle on a scale never seen before, yet even after so many launches, it has failed in almost every conceivable way. By comparison, Jeff Bezos’s Blue Origin has definitely heard this phrase. They have been astonishingly quiet about their latest rocket, New Glenn.

In fact, they have only just conducted their second-ever launch. However, the astounding success of that launch should give SpaceX a few sleepless nights, as it perfectly demonstrates that Blue Origin is preparing to leapfrog SpaceX.So, let’s look at the details of this incredible launch.New Glenn’s previous launch was a partial success, placing a prototype satellite into medium-Earth orbit but failing to land its reusable first stage.

However, getting a payload into orbit on their first attempt was so damn impressive that NASA greenlighted the launch of their twin-probe ESCAPADE Mars mission on the next New Glenn flight.On November 13th, New Glenn successfully launched and delivered the ESCAPADE probes on their journey to Mars without a hitch and perfectly landed the first stage, proving New Glenn is a highly competent and economically viable launch vehicle.

Blue Origin’s Ariane Cornell phrased it best during the launch stream when she said, “We are open for business, baby, on New Glenn!”But why should SpaceX be scared? Their Starship is a very different and far larger rocket, meaning that they aren’t competitors. Right?Well, don’t forget that Starship was supposed to have 100+ tons of payload capacity to Low Earth Orbit (LEO) from the get-go, yet even after iterating the design over more than ten launches, it currently sits at less than 35 tons to LEO, which is ten tons less than New Glenn.

Musk has recognised that Starship needs a complete redesign, so he is launching unplanned Versions 2 and 3 of Starship soon and has claimed that they will have payloads of 150 tons and 200 tons to LEO, respectively. However, there is absolutely no reason to trust these claims. What’s more, even after 11 test flights, no Starship has ever even reached orbit, let alone placed a payload into orbit.

So, while they might seem like very different rockets for very different uses, that isn’t true. As it stands, New Glen has a much larger payload and is significantly more capable and reliable.And what if I told you that New Glenn is cheaper than anything SpaceX has to offer?NASA paid New Glenn $20 million for this launch, though some sources estimate the price at $55 million.

That means New Glen costs $444 to $1,222 per kg to LEO (with its 45-ton payload to LEO).SpaceX’s closest working competitor is the Falcon Heavy. SpaceX tends to hide and underestimate launch costs; for example, they still quote the fully reusable price for a Falcon Heavy launch, even though none have launched with that setup in six years, and none are scheduled to either.

But the Falcon Heavy recently launched NASA’s Europa Clipper mission to Jupiter, which is a comparable contract to the ESCAPADE launch, giving us a verified comparison point. NASA handed SpaceX $178 million for this launch. In this partially “expendable” configuration, Falcon Heavy has a payload to LEO of 57 tons, meaning a price tag of $3,122 per kg to LEO.

So, SpaceX’s Falcon Heavy is around three times as expensive as New Glenn!Okay, so what about Starship?

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11/19/2025

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