
A SpaceX Starship rocket burst into a massive fireball. Credit: @therocketfuture
Elon Musk’s rocket company, SpaceX, faced another blow this week. On Wednesday, its Starship rocket exploded during a ground test. A huge fireball lit up the sky, marking the fourth failure in a row for this project.
Starship is a key part of NASA’s mission to send astronauts back to the moon by 2027. NASA has agreed to pay SpaceX nearly $4 billion to build the spacecraft. While past launches did test a few systems, all ended in failure during flight.
Failures Not Unexpected
SpaceX has always said that setbacks are part of the process. The company uses a strategy called “build fast, test often.” Instead of building one perfect rocket, they test cheaper versions to learn faster. This method helps them fix problems quickly, even if the rockets explode during testing.
Still, this latest blast couldn’t come at a worse time. Musk recently returned to his businesses after serving in a political role. He now faces pressure to fix problems across his companies.
Tesla Faces Delays and Criticism
Back at Tesla, Musk is preparing to launch robotaxis in Austin. The launch was set for Sunday but may get delayed. Fewer than 24 cars will be used in the first phase. Musk has already warned the timeline could shift.
Lawmakers in Texas want Tesla to wait until September due to a new self-driving car law. Meanwhile, Tesla shares fell earlier this week after reports said the company would pause production of the Cybertruck and Model Y for a week. This is the third factory shutdown this year.
In Europe, Tesla is also losing ground. Chinese automaker BYD has now outsold Tesla in battery-powered vehicles for the first time, a major change in the market.
AI Company Burning Through Cash
Musk’s AI startup, xAI, is also under pressure. A recent report claimed the company is spending $1 billion every month. The costs of building its AI models are rising fast, while income remains low.
Musk strongly denied the report. He called it “nonsense” on his social media platform X.
He also criticized xAI’s chatbot, Grok, after it shared data about political violence. The chatbot cited reliable numbers, but Musk didn’t agree and claimed the information was false. He promised to fix it.
Musk Laughs Off Explosion
Despite all the trouble, Musk is keeping a light tone. After the Starship rocket exploded, he posted, “Just a scratch,” followed by “RIP Ship 36” and a few jokes.
When someone asked his chatbot why he was sharing memes, Grok said it was likely Musk’s way of reacting to the rocket failure. Musk replied with a bullseye emoji, signaling agreement.
Even with back-to-back setbacks, Musk seems focused on pushing forward. He has promised to send Starship to Mars by late next year—a goal that now seems far off.

