The failed mission comes two years after the Japanese start-upโs first moonshot ended in a crash landing.
A Japanese-made private lunar lander has crashed while attempting to touch down on the moon, with its makers officially declaring the mission a failure.
Tokyo-based company ispace said on Friday that its lander, named Resilience, dropped out of lunar orbit as planned and that the mission appeared to be going well.
But flight controllers lost contact with Resilience, which was carrying a mini rover, moments before its scheduled touchdown on the surface of the moon following an hourlong descent. Ground support was met with silence as they attempted to regain contact with the lander and after several hours declared the mission a failure.
The companyโs livestream of the attempted landing then came to an abrupt end.
โWe have to take seriously what happened,โ ispace CEO and founder Takeshi Hakamada said after the failed mission, as he apologised to everyone who contributed.
This is the firmโs second failed attempt to soft land on the lunar surface, coming two years after the Japanese start-upโs first attempt to reach the moon ended in a crash landing.
Launched in December 2022, the firmโs Hakuto-R Mission 1 reached lunar orbit but crashed during its final descent after an error caused the lander to believe it was lower than it actually was.
That missionโs successor, Resilience, was launched in January from Florida on a long, roundabout journey. It shared a ride on a SpaceX rocket with Firefly Aerospaceโs Blue Ghost, which, upon reaching the moon first in March this year, made the US firm the first private entity to make a โfully successfulโ soft landing there.
The 2.3-metre (7.5-foot) Resilience lander was targeting the top of the moon, where the ispace team had chosen a flat area with few boulders in Mare Frigoris, or Sea of Cold, to land.
Resilience was expected to beam back pictures within hours of landing, before ispaceโs European-built rover โ named Tenacious โ would have been lowered onto the lunar surface this weekend. The rover, made of carbon fibre-reinforced plastic and sporting a high-definition camera, would then have scouted out the area and scooped up lunar dirt for NASA.
Resilience was also carrying a toy-sized red house created by Swedish artist Mikael Genberg. Moonhouse, as the model Swedish-style cottage was called, was intended to be the moonโs first โbuildingโ, in a nod to Hakamadaโs vision of humans living and working there as early as the 2040s.
But ispaceโs now second failed landing has left the Japanese entrepreneurโs vision in doubt. The aerospace companyโs next, much bigger lander is scheduled to launch by 2027 with NASAโs involvement.
Prior to Fridayโs failed mission, the Japanese firmโs chief financial officer, Jumpei Nozaki, promised to continue its lunar quest regardless of the outcome.
But Jeremy Fix, chief engineer for ispaceโs US subsidiary, said at a conference last month that the firm does not have โinfinite fundsโ and cannot afford repeated failures.
Company officials said this latest failed mission cost less than the first one โ which exceeded $100m โ but declined to provide an exact figure.


