Rocket Lab Turns to Kedging to Deliver Neutron Rocket to Wallops for September Push

Rocket Lab is going full pirate, using anchors and barges, to get its Neutron rocket to Wallops Island on schedule.

Nkeiru Ezekwere
3 Min Read

Rocket Lab is pulling out all the stops, including nautical tricks, to get its Neutron rocket to Wallops Island, Virginia, on schedule for a September delivery. Why the splashy logistics? Because the spaceport sits atop shallow waterways, and the company still hasn’t received green lights to dredge a permanent channel.

Why Wallops Island?

QRocket Lab already launches its small Electron rocket from the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) at Wallops, but Neutron is a different beast. It’s bigger, heavier, and requires barge delivery instead of trucking. Route? That’s a mile-long channel called Sloop Gut, which is too shallow for a straightforward haul.

They actually applied to dredge Sloop Gut in March, committing over $5 million to widen it. Approval came from Virginia’s Marine Resources Commission in May. However, feds (namely, the Army Corps of Engineers) still haven’t signed off. Officials? Crickets.

Related: Rune Raises $24M to Bring AI to Military Logistics.

To dodge this wait, Rocket Lab and the Virginia Port Authority submitted a “kedging” permit. Kedging is a clever (and old-school) maritime trick: drop an anchor ahead, pull the vessel forward, then repeat. Think of it as inching a barge through muddy waters, stealth mode enabled.

They’re asking to use kedging for up to five shipments, or until June 2026, whichever comes first. If approved, they can start deliveries on time while permanent dredging is pending.

Rocket Lab isn’t leaving anything to chance. They’ve secured permission for up to three beach landings using cranes and ramps, but only in the off-season. No go between March 15 and August 31. So, it’s a temporary workaround, not a full fix.

Other back-ups, like trucking rocket segments or using a public boat ramp, were crossed off the list. Why? Either too expensive, impractical, or downright impossible in bad weather.

It is not the rocket stage-mating, wet-dress trials, or FAA licensing that is giving Rocket Lab sleepless nights, it is marine access. With September deadlines looming and a maiden launch of Neutron expected in the second half of 2025, the tide waits for no one.

In short: landside logistics are ready, but maritime logistics is the bottleneck. If kedging works as hoped, deliver barge cargo, complete the checklist, fuel rockets, and launch. No signal? Beach barge. No go there? Well… let’s hope tides align before hardware waits.
Neutron’s flight depends less on engines and more on anchors, and if kedging works, Rocket Lab just might rewrite space-launch logistics.

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