NASA and SpaceX have announced a delay to their upcoming International Space Station (ISS) mission after forecasts indicated poor weather conditions on the original launch date.
The mission, which was scheduled to lift off on February 11, has now been postponed to no sooner than February 12, pending improved weather conditions at the launch site.
NASA and SpaceX confirmed on Monday that unfavourable weather expected on February 11 prompted the decision to delay the launch. The mission team is continuing to monitor conditions closely to determine the next viable launch window.
Meanwhile, the four-member crew remains in quarantine at Kennedy Space Center, following standard pre-launch health protocols while awaiting clearance to proceed.
Crew-12 is NASA’s 12th rotational crew mission to the International Space Station. The flight will transport four astronauts for a long-duration science expedition aboard the orbiting laboratory.
The mission will support ongoing scientific research aboard the ISS, with experiments designed to contribute to future Moon and Mars exploration programmes.
Jessica Meir (NASA) will serve as mission commander
Total spaceflight experience: 205 days
Jack Hathaway (NASA) will act as pilot
Profession: U.S. Navy pilot
Sophie Adenot (ESA)
First spaceflight
Former French helicopter test pilot
Andrey Fedyaev (Roscosmos)
Second space mission
Previously flew 186 days aboard Crew-6 in 2023
Crew-12 is set to launch aboard SpaceX’s Falcon 9, a two-stage reusable rocket, from Space Launch Complex 40 at Cape Canaveral.
Equipped with nine Merlin 1D engines
Each engine produces 845 kN of thrust
Features grid fins and landing gear designed for recovery and reuse
Powered by a Merlin Vacuum Engine
Responsible for placing the spacecraft into orbit
The mission will use SpaceX’s Crew Dragon, the human-rated version of the Dragon 2 spacecraft.
Crew capacity: Up to seven astronauts
Autonomous docking with the ISS
Earth return via controlled ocean splashdown
Once the mission concludes, the spacecraft will safely return the crew to Earth after undocking from the space station.
With weather remaining the primary constraint, NASA and SpaceX will reassess launch conditions before confirming the final liftoff time. If conditions improve, the Crew-12 mission could proceed as early as February 12, keeping the ISS crew rotation on schedule.