Vol VA266 | Galileo L14 | Ariane 6 | Arianespace – YouTube
Vol VA266 | Galileo L14 | Ariane 6 | Arianespace - YouTube

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Europe’s towering Ariane 6 rocket is gaining momentum in the heavy-lift launch market as the vehicle gears up for its fifth flight.

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a white rocket launches into an evening sky

An Arianespace Ariane 6 rocket launches the Sentinel-1D Earth-observation satellite from French Guiana on Nov. 4, 2025. (Image credit: Arianespace)

The L14 satellites are scheduled to deploy about 3 hours and 20 minutes after liftoff and will then spend three days unfolding their solar arrays and running checks on critical systems. The two satellites will then enter a four-month drift and positioning phase before settling into their final orbital position to begin operation.

retired in 2023, or the Russian-built Soyuz rocket, an arrangement that Europe ended following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

Europe tapped SpaceX’s Falcon 9 to fly Galileo satellites after the invasion, but now that Ariane 6 is operational, the continent can loft those missions without depending on outside launch providers.

This will be the fifth-ever launch of the Ariane 6, which completed four successful flights over the past year, with its most recent lifting off just over a month ago.