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Ariane 6

Europe's next-generation launch vehicle — designed to restore independent European access to space after the retirement of Ariane 5.

~63 m
Height
21,650 kg
LEO (A64)
Jul 2024
Maiden Flight
2 or 4
Solid Boosters

Overview

Ariane 6 is a modular launch vehicle developed by ArianeGroup under the authority of the European Space Agency (ESA). It succeeds the highly successful Ariane 5, which flew 117 times between 1996 and 2023 and established Europe as a major force in commercial GEO satellite launches. Ariane 6 is designed to be more cost-competitive and flexible, with two configurations — A62 (two solid boosters) and A64 (four solid boosters) — to serve a wider range of missions.

The vehicle's maiden flight took place on 9 July 2024 from the Guiana Space Centre (CSG) in Kourou, French Guiana. The flight was largely successful — the core stage and first upper-stage burn performed nominally, deploying multiple payloads — though the Vinci upper-stage engine's auxiliary power unit experienced an anomaly during its final deorbit burn, preventing controlled re-entry of the upper stage. Despite this partial anomaly, the mission was declared a qualified success and cleared the path for operational flights.

Specifications

ParameterAriane 62 (A62)Ariane 64 (A64)
Height~63 m~63 m
Solid boosters2 × P120C4 × P120C
Core stage engine1 × Vulcain 2.1 (LOX/LH2)1 × Vulcain 2.1 (LOX/LH2)
Upper stage engine1 × Vinci (LOX/LH2, restartable)1 × Vinci (LOX/LH2, restartable)
Payload to LEO10,350 kg21,650 kg
Payload to GTO4,500 kg11,500 kg
Fairing diameter5.4 m5.4 m
ReusableNo (expendable)No (expendable)

Strategic Importance

Ariane 6 exists primarily to guarantee European autonomous access to space — a strategic imperative that took on new urgency after Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022. The conflict ended the long-standing partnership that allowed Soyuz rockets to launch from Kourou, leaving Europe temporarily without an operational medium-to-heavy launcher between Ariane 5's retirement in July 2023 and Ariane 6's maiden flight in July 2024.

The vehicle is mandated to launch European institutional payloads — including Galileo navigation satellites, Copernicus/Sentinel Earth observation missions, and components of the planned IRIS² secure connectivity constellation. Several commercial operators have also contracted Ariane 6 launches, though the vehicle faces intense price competition from SpaceX's Falcon 9.

The Vinci Upper Stage

A key improvement over Ariane 5 is the Vinci engine — a restartable, expander-cycle LOX/LH2 engine producing 180 kN of thrust. The ability to restart in orbit allows Ariane 6 to perform multiple burns, deploying payloads to different orbits on a single mission and enabling a deorbit burn to comply with space debris mitigation guidelines. This multi-burn capability is critical for institutional missions like Galileo constellation deployment, where satellites must be placed into precise MEO slots.

Competitive Landscape

Ariane 6 enters a launch market dominated by SpaceX's reusable Falcon 9, which offers lower per-kilogram costs due to first-stage recovery. While Ariane 6 is not reusable, ArianeGroup has begun studies into a reusable successor (sometimes referred to as future evolutions or "Ariane Next"). Europe's strategy with Ariane 6 prioritises guaranteed access and institutional sovereignty over pure cost competition, a rationale similar to how the US maintains multiple launch providers through the National Security Space Launch programme.

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