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Japan’s ispace fails again: Resilience lander crashes on Moon

6 Jun 2025, 2:52 PM
Japan’s ispace fails again: Resilience lander crashes on Moon

TOKYO, June 6 — Japanese company ispace said its uncrewed lunar lander likely crashed onto the lunar surface during its touchdown attempt today, marking another failure two years after an unsuccessful inaugural mission.

Tokyo-based ispace had hoped to join US firms Intuitive Machines and Firefly Aerospace in making successful commercial lunar landings amid a global race that includes state-run lunar missions from China and India.

Although the failure means another multi-year pause in Japan’s commercial access to the Moon, the country remains committed to the US-led Artemis programme and a wide range of Japanese companies are studying lunar exploration as a business frontier.

Resilience, ispace’s second lunar lander, had problems measuring its distance to the surface and could not slow its descent fast enough, the company said, adding it has not been able to communicate with Resilience after a likely hard landing.

“Truly diverse scenarios were possible, including issues with the propulsion system, software or hardware, especially with sensors,” ispace chief technology officer Ryo Ujiie told a press conference.

A room of more than 500 ispace employees, shareholders, sponsors and government officials abruptly grew silent when flight data was lost less than two minutes before the scheduled touchdown time during a public viewing event at mission partner Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corp in the wee hours in Tokyo.

Shares of ispace were untraded, overwhelmed by sell orders, and looked set to close at the daily limit-low, which would mark a 29 per cent fall. As of yesterday’s close, ispace had a market capitalisation of over 110 billion yen (RM3.2 billion).

“We’re not facing any immediate financial deterioration or distress because of the event,” ispace CFO Jumpei Nozaki said in the press conference, citing recurring investor support.

In 2023, ispace’s first lander crashed into the Moon’s surface due to inaccurate recognition of its altitude. Software remedies were implemented, while the hardware design was mostly unchanged in Resilience.

US$16 mln payload

Resilience was carrying a four-wheeled rover built by ispace’s Luxembourg subsidiary and five external payloads worth a total of US$16 million (RM67.6 million), including scientific instruments from Japanese firms and a Taiwanese university.

The lander had targeted Mare Frigoris, a basaltic plain about 900km from the Moon’s north pole.

If the landing had been successful, the 2.3m-tall lander and the rover would have begun 14 days of planned exploration activities, including capturing of regolith, the moon’s fine-grained surface material, on a contract with US space agency Nasa.

Resilience in January shared a SpaceX rocket launch with Firefly’s Blue Ghost lander, which took a faster trajectory to the Moon and touched down successfully in March.

Intuitive Machines, which last year marked the world’s first commercial lunar touchdown, also landed its second Athena lander in March, although in a toppled position just as with its first mission.

Japan last year became the world’s fifth country to achieve a soft lunar landing after the former Soviet Union, the US, China and India, when the national Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency achieved the touchdown of its SLIM lander.

The government last year signed an agreement with Nasa to include Japanese astronauts in Artemis lunar missions and has supported private firms’ research projects for future lunar development, assuming ispace’s transport capabilities.

“Expectations for ispace have not faded,” Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba said in an X post.

Although ispace will likely remain Japan’s most advanced lunar transport firm, some Japanese companies may start to consider transport options from foreign entities to test their lunar exploration visions, said Ritsumeikan University’s Prof Kazuto Saiki, who was involved in the SLIM mission.

For its third mission in 2027, ispace’s US unit is building a bigger lander as part of Nasa’s Commercial Lunar Payload Services for the Artemis programme. The company projects six more missions in the US and Japan through 2029.

“Nasa increasingly needs private companies to improve cost efficiency for key missions with limited budgets,” ispace CEO Takeshi Hakamada said, referring to US President Donald Trump’s proposed budget cuts.

“To meet Nasa’s expectations, we’ll support our US subsidiary to keep up with development and play a role.”

— Reuters

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