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Blue Origin focuses on moon landers instead of New Shepard rockets after shuttering the New Shepard program

Blue Origin, owned by billionaire Amazon.com founder Jeff Bezos, announced on Friday that it would be ceasing its space tourism rocket program for at least two years. The company will instead focus on developing a NASA moon lander. Blue Origin, the billionaire Amazon.com co-founder Jeff Bezos' company, announced that it would "pause New Shepard flight and shift resources in order to further accelerate the development of the company’s human lunar capability," according to a company statement. The reusable New Shepard, which stands 60 feet tall with its gumdrop-shaped capsule on top has launched dozens of paying customers and research experiments since 2021.

Blue Origin CEO Dave Limp made the announcement to his employees in an email on Friday that began with "I have some important news to share" according to a copy of the e-mail seen by.

Limp added that "New Shepherd has been a great success, and it will always be our first step", adding that "the decision to take a pause is one I do not take lightly."

New Shepard, Blue Origin's debut rocket, was launched in 2015. It is designed to fly 70 miles into the air and land vertically, on a slab of concrete.

This landing technique helped Blue Origin later develop New Glenn, a heavy-lift orbital rocket of the same class that competes with launchers from Elon Musk's SpaceX. It lands in an identical vertical manner after boosting payloads to orbit.

In an email, Limp stated: "We will redirect our people and our resources towards further acceleration of human lunar capabilities including New Glenn."

Staff at the company, who spoke anonymously, said that Blue Origin's decision to cancel New Shepard was a "surprise" for some employees.

Blue Origin and NASA have a $3.6-billion contract that funds the development of Blue Moon. This lunar lander is expected to be used to transport astronauts from the United States to the surface of our moon later this decade. (Reporting and editing by David Gregorio; Joey Roulette)

(source: Reuters)