Japan’s ⁠Space ⁠One said ⁠its Kairos rocket terminated its flight after lift-off on Thursday, failing to achieve the country’s first entirely commercial satellite launch on its third attempt in a row.

    Kairos “terminated the flight after judging that the achievement of its mission would be difficult”, the company said in a statement. “We are currently investigating the details.”

    Space One’s Kairos No 3, a 23-tonne solid-fuel rocket, lifted off in the morning from the privately run Space Port Kii in Kushimoto, Wakayama prefecture, on the Pacific coast.

    If the flight had succeeded, it would have made Space One the first Japanese private entity to put a satellite into orbit on its own.

    The ⁠18-metre (59-foot) rocket was carrying five experimental satellites from Japanese companies and the ‌Taiwan ‌Space Agency.

    A boy appears disappointed after the launch of the Kairos No 3 is cancelled on Wednesday. Photo: Kyodo

    A boy appears disappointed after the launch of the Kairos No 3 is cancelled on Wednesday. Photo: Kyodo

    Thursday’s failure came a day after the Japanese start-up made a last-minute decision to cancel an already postponed launch.

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