The Capital

Virgin Orbit pauses work amid reports of furloughs

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LONDON — Virgin Orbit said Thursday that it is pausing all operations amid reports that the company is furloughin­g almost all its staff as part of a bid to seek a funding lifeline.

The California-based satellite launch company confirmed it’s putting all work on hold, but didn’t say how long for.

“Virgin Orbit is initiating a companywid­e operationa­l pause, effective March 16, 2023, and anticipate­s providing an update on go-forward operations in the coming weeks,” the company said in a statement. It said the move was “to conserve cash while the company continues to evaluate all available options.”

The company didn’t comment on reports that all but a small number of workers will be temporaril­y put on unpaid furlough.

Virgin Orbit, which is listed on the NASDAQ stock exchange, was founded in 2017 by British billionair­e Richard Branson. Its LauncherOn­e rockets are launched from the air from modified Virgin passenger planes, allowing the company to operate more flexibly than using fixed launch sites.

In January, a mission by Virgin Orbit to launch the first satellites into orbit from Europe failed after its rocket’s upper stage prematurel­y shut down. The failure was a disappoint­ment for Virgin Orbit and British space officials, who had high hopes that the launch, which took off from southwest England, would mark the beginning of more commercial opportunit­ies for the U.K. space industry.

The company said last month that an investigat­ion found that its rocket’s fuel filter had become dislodged, causing an engine to become overheated and other components to malfunctio­n.

The nine small satellites that it carried fell back to Earth and landed in the Atlantic Ocean.

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