French commercial rocket launch provider Arianespace has confirmed its VV15 mission, a Vega rocket carrying an Emirati military satellite, failed 2 minutes after launch, veering off course and crashing in the Atlantic Ocean.

“A major anomaly occurred, resulting in the loss of the mission,” Luce Fabreguettes, executive VP of missions, operations and purchasing, said. “On behalf of Arianespace, I wish to express my deepest apologies to our customers for the loss of their payload and telling them how sorry I am.”

The Vega launched from Guiana Space Center in Kourou, French Guiana at 1:53 GMT Thursday and left its intended course immediately before losing telemetry data two minutes into the launch, during its second-stage ignition phase.

Arianespace confirms tonight’s Vega launch has failed, resulting in the loss of the UAE’s Falcon Eye Earth-imaging satellite. This is the first Vega launch failure in 15 missions to date. https://t.co/stR38gqMmrpic.twitter.com/wdk2yFWYQq — Spaceflight Now (@SpaceflightNow) July 11, 2019

“More precise information” from the first flight data analysis would be communicated to everyone as soon as possible, Fabreguettes promised during the livestreamed launch.

The Emirati satellite, Falcon Eye 1, was a dual-purpose Airbus-built model designed to supply imagery for the UAE Armed Forces and the commercial market while orbiting Earth 15 times per day. While the country had scheduled a second satellite - Falcon Eye 2 - for later in the year, that timeline is now uncertain.

UAE's Falcon Eye-1 Reconnaissance Satellite Set For Launch From French Guiana on 6 July 2019 #SpaceWatchGLhttps://t.co/snCMWpaon1pic.twitter.com/acNtVr9eUq — SpaceWatch.Global (@SpaceWatchGL) July 4, 2019

Arianespace’s live webcast of tonight’s launch has started. The Vega countdown is on track for liftoff from the Guiana Space Center at 9:53:03pm EDT (0153:03 GMT) with the Falcon Eye 1 Earth-imaging satellite for the UAE’s military. WATCH LIVE: https://t.co/stR38gqMmrpic.twitter.com/NmohXBiecW — Spaceflight Now (@SpaceflightNow) July 11, 2019

The VV15 mission, delayed twice due to unfavorable weather conditions, was Vega’s 15th since 2012 and its first failure. The Vega is designed to lift 1,500kg to low-Earth orbit.

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