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Byron Shire
June 10, 2026

Australia’s first rocket set to launch 

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Gilmour Space’s Eris rocket at the Bowen Orbital Spaceport in Queensland. Photo supplied

Australian rocket company Gilmour Space Technologies has had the first Australian sovereign orbital rocket approved to launch.

Based in the Gold Coast and Bowen Gilmour Space announced that they have ‘a launch window starting “no earlier than” March 15 for the maiden flight of Eris, the first Australian-designed and built rocket aiming for orbit’.

Adam Gilmour, co-founder and CEO of Gilmour Space said, ‘This will be the first attempt of an Australian rocket to reach orbit from Australian soil’.

The news follows final airspace approvals from the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA) and Airservices Australia, clearing the last regulatory hurdle before launch. It also marks the culmination of years of innovative R&D and manufacturing by the Gold Coast-based company, which developed the Eris launch vehicle and Bowen Orbital Spaceport in North Queensland.

Gilmour Space made history in March last year when its Bowen spaceport was granted the first orbital launch facility licence in Australia, and when it secured the country’s first Australian Launch Permit for Eris TestFlight 1 in November. Now, with airspace arrangements finalised and mandatory notice given to the Australian Space Agency, the company is preparing for liftoff.

Adam Glimour, CEO of Gilmour Space Technologies, The Echo’s own Electron Wrangler Ewan Willis, and the Gilmour team read The Echo as they assemble Eris, the first Australian-made rocket. The rocket, developed on the Gold Coast, was recently transported to the Bowen Orbital Spaceport in north Queensland to be assembled and is looking to launch in the next few months.

First time the hardest

With the March 15 window fast approaching, Mr Gilmour said that, ‘it’s important to understand that delays or “scrubs” are a normal part of rocket launches. These can last anywhere from hours to days, or even weeks, and are often caused by weather conditions, technical issues, or other factors. Safety is always the top priority. We’ll only launch when we’re ready, and when conditions are appropriate.

‘Secondly, the first launch is always the hardest. Reaching orbit is a highly complex engineering challenge, and every successful rocket company has faced setbacks in their early attempts – SpaceX, for one, did it on their fourth attempt. It’s almost unheard of for a private rocket company to launch successfully to orbit the first time. Whether we make it off the pad, reach max Q, or get all the way to space, what’s important is that every second of flight will deliver valuable data that will improve our rocket’s reliability and performance for future launches,’ he said. 

‘Thirdly, this is the road we must take to build sovereign space capability that will be critical for Australia’s future. Launching Australian-owned and controlled rockets from home soil means more high-tech jobs, greater security, economic growth, and technological independence. Only six countries in the world are launching regularly to space using their own technology, and Australia could soon be one of them.

‘I want to thank our incredible team at Gilmour Space for all their hard work and dedication in getting to this critical first flight. Whatever happens next, know that you’ve already made history – we now build rockets in Australia. And this is only the beginning.’

 For more information about Eris TestFlight 1, visit www.gspace.com/missions.



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