Commerce
Blue Origin announces 10% workforce cut
The company still intends to land on the Moon this year and to up the launches of its New Glenn and New Shepard rockets to a more 'regular cadence,' CEO Dave Limp said.
![Blue Origin's New Glenn rocket sits on the launch pad at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, Florida, on January 11. [Gregg Newton/AFP]](/gc8/images/2025/02/14/49170-afp__20250111__36tg9m9__v1__highres__firstlaunchofblueoriginsnewglennrocket-370_237.webp)
By BlueShift and AFP |
WASHINGTON -- Blue Origin is laying off about 10% of its workforce following a period of rapid expansion, the firm's chief executive told staff on Thursday (February 13).
"We grew and hired incredibly fast in the last few years," CEO Dave Limp wrote in an email -- a copy of which was obtained by AFP -- explaining the company's "tough" decision.
"With that growth came more bureaucracy and less focus than we needed," he continued, adding that the makeup of the company "must change."
"Sadly, this resulted in eliminating some positions in engineering, R&D, and program/project management and thinning out our layers of management," he said.
The firm has roughly 11,000 personnel, according to a recent PitchBook estimate, so more than 1,000 employees stand to lose their jobs.
Founded by Jeff Bezos almost a quarter of a century ago, Blue Origin is now one of the United States' largest private space companies, and has in recent years been attempting to win lucrative government contracts in an industry still largely dominated by Elon Musk's SpaceX.
A turning point in January
Its massive New Glenn rocket on January 16 reached orbital space for the first time, marking a potential turning point in the commercial space race.
The launch of this powerful, partly reusable rocket was a significant achievement for the company, which had previously been forced to postpone the launch several times because of technical issues.
Blue Origin has already secured a NASA contract to launch two Mars probes aboard New Glenn, and will also support the deployment of Project Kuiper, a satellite internet constellation designed to compete with Musk's Starlink.
The company recently began taking tourists into space on its New Shepard rocket, and is also developing a family of lunar landers for NASA's Artemis missions to the Moon.
In his email to staff, Limp said that Blue Origin still had a bright future ahead despite Thursday's layoffs.
"I am extremely confident in the enormous opportunities in front of us and have never been more optimistic about our mission," he said. "We will be a stronger, faster, and more customer-focused company that consistently meets and exceeds our commitments."
He added that the company still intends to land on the Moon this year and to up the launches of its New Glenn and New Shepard rockets to a more "regular cadence."