NASA will broadcast the launch live worldwide. Photo credit: NASA/Brandon Hancock
NASA is set to launch Artemis II today, April 1, marking the first time astronauts will travel beyond low Earth orbit since the Apollo era more than five decades ago. The mission represents a pivotal step in the United States’ long-term strategy to return humans to the Moon and establish a sustained presence there.
The launch is scheduled to take place from Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 6:24pm Eastern Time. This corresponds to 11:24pm in the United Kingdom and 00:24am in Spain in the early hours of April 2. A two-hour launch window remains in place, allowing for flexibility in the event of minor technical or weather-related delays.
As the countdown progresses, final checks are being carried out on the Space Launch System (SLS) rocket and the Orion spacecraft, both of which are central to the Artemis programme. The mission follows the successful un-crewed Artemis I test flight and will be the first to carry astronauts.
A mission designed to prove deep space capability
Artemis II will not attempt a lunar landing. Instead, it is structured as a crewed test flight intended to validate critical systems required for future missions. The Orion spacecraft will carry its crew on a trajectory that loops around the Moon before returning to Earth, in a journey expected to last approximately 10 days.
During this time, the spacecraft will travel hundreds of thousands of miles, reaching distances not experienced by human crews since the 1970s. The mission will push Orion beyond the protective reach of Earth’s magnetosphere, exposing both crew and systems to the harsher conditions of deep space.
Engineers will use the mission to assess life-support performance, propulsion systems, navigation accuracy and communications over long distances. The ability of astronauts to manually control the spacecraft will also be tested, providing essential data for more complex operations in future missions.
These objectives are considered critical in preparing for Artemis III, which aims to return humans to the lunar surface later this decade.
The mission carries significant symbolic importance. Koch is set to become the first woman to travel into deep space, while Glover will be the first Black astronaut to do so. Hansen, representing the Canadian Space Agency, will become the first non-American astronaut to journey to the Moon’s vicinity.
The crew has undergone extensive training, including simulations of deep space conditions, emergency procedures and spacecraft operations. Their performance will be closely monitored, providing valuable insights into human endurance and teamwork during long-duration missions beyond Earth orbit.
How to watch the launch live
NASA will broadcast the launch live worldwide, with coverage available through NASA+, the agency’s official streaming platform, as well as via its website and YouTube channel. Readers will also be able to watch the launch via the link provided in this Euro Weekly News article.
Live coverage is expected to begin several hours before liftoff, offering commentary, mission updates and behind-the-scenes access from Kennedy Space Center.
For viewers in the UK, coverage will build throughout the late evening, with liftoff expected at approximately 11:24pm. In Spain, audiences can tune in from around 10:30pm, with launch scheduled shortly after midnight.
Major international broadcasters are also expected to provide live coverage or rolling updates, reflecting the global significance of the mission.
Laying the groundwork for lunar return and beyond
Artemis II forms part of a broader effort to establish a long-term human presence on the Moon. Unlike the Apollo missions, which were limited in duration, the Artemis programme aims to develop sustainable exploration capabilities, including repeated missions and extended stays.
Central to this vision is the planned Lunar Gateway, a space station that will orbit the Moon and act as a staging point for surface missions. In addition, NASA and its partners are targeting the lunar south pole, where water ice could support life-support systems and fuel production.
The technologies and operational experience gained through Artemis II will inform these future missions, helping to refine spacecraft systems, mission planning and international collaboration.
A new chapter begins today
The launch of Artemis II represents a defining moment in modern space exploration. It signals not only a return to deep space, but the beginning of a new phase in which the Moon is viewed as a stepping stone rather than a final destination.
If successful, the mission will demonstrate that humans can once again travel safely to lunar distances, paving the way for the next stage of exploration. In doing so, Artemis II will help to transform ambitions of long-term lunar habitation into a practical reality, while bringing humanity one step closer to eventual missions to Mars.
Spain continues to use a standard minimum-age approach. Photo credit: Christian Bertrand
The United Kingdom’s planned lifetime tobacco sales ban for people born on or after January 1 2009 could create a loophole for young British teens travelling to Spain and other countries, as they may still be able to purchase cigarettes and vaping products where standard age-based rules remain in place.
The policy restricts tobacco sales based on year of birth, meaning those affected would never be eligible to buy cigarettes from UK retailers. Outside the UK, however, access is determined by national age limits rather than generational rules, creating a clear contrast for those travelling abroad.
Different rules in Spain
In Spain, tobacco sales are regulated through a standard minimum-age system, with purchase generally permitted from 18 years old. Eligibility is based solely on age at the point of sale, rather than year of birth or membership of a specific generation.
Tobacco products are widely available through regulated retail outlets across the country, including supermarkets, kiosks and licensed shops. Sales are subject to identity checks where age is unclear, particularly in urban and tourist-heavy areas where enforcement is more visible.
Travel-related differences
Spain is one of the most frequently visited destinations for UK travellers, with millions of trips each year for tourism, work and study. This makes it a common setting where differences in national consumer rules become visible in practice. For those affected by the UK policy, experiences abroad would depend on local regulations.
In Spain, access to regulated products would be governed by local age verification at the point of purchase. This means availability is shaped by Spanish law rather than any UK restriction, and enforcement is handled entirely by Spanish authorities and retailers. In practice, this creates situations where legal access to tobacco products may differ depending on location, particularly in busy tourist areas where international visitors form a significant proportion of customers.
Could the policy lead to tobacco tourism
The difference between UK and overseas rules has raised the possibility of a form of “tobacco tourism”, where individuals affected by the ban access products while travelling rather than at home. Because the UK restriction is based on year of birth, those in the affected group would never be able to legally buy tobacco domestically, even as adults.
In countries such as Spain, where access is determined by a standard minimum age of 18, the same individuals could legally purchase tobacco once they meet local age requirements. This creates a situation where availability depends entirely on location.
In practice, any such behaviour is likely to be limited and linked to existing travel rather than people making dedicated trips solely to buy tobacco. However, the contrast may be more visible in popular holiday destinations and border regions, where differences in national rules are easier to navigate.
Gibraltar border factor
The issue may also be particularly relevant in Gibraltar, where residents can cross directly into Spain within minutes. If Gibraltar applies UK-aligned restrictions, individuals affected by the 2009 cohort rule could potentially be unable to purchase tobacco locally while still being able to do so across the border in Spain, subject to Spanish law.
That would not change domestic restrictions in either territory, but it could create a practical cross-border difference for residents living near the frontier. Vaping regulations may also differ depending on how each jurisdiction chooses to regulate nicotine products, as tobacco and vape policies are not always aligned across borders. This means access to different products could vary even within short travel distances.
Cross-border policy contrast
The UK and Spain operate different tobacco regulatory systems, with the UK moving towards a generational restriction based on date of birth, while Spain continues to use a standard minimum-age approach.
This creates a policy divergence between a cohort-based restriction and an age-based system. It also means that eligibility rules are structured differently depending on whether the focus is long-term population prevention or immediate age compliance at point of sale. As a result, the experience of future adults affected by the UK measure may differ depending on whether they remain in the UK or travel abroad, particularly within Europe where cross-border movement is relatively straightforward.
Broader implications
The contrast has prompted discussion about how national public health policies interact with international mobility. While domestic restrictions apply within a country’s borders, access to tobacco remains dependent on local law.
This raises questions about consistency in regulation when citizens move between jurisdictions with different frameworks for controlling the same products. Critics point to inconsistencies that arise when individuals face different legal conditions depending solely on geography.
At the same time, supporters argue that national governments retain the right to set domestic health policy independently, even if outcomes differ abroad.
In Spain, where tobacco remains widely available under conventional age rules, the contrast with UK restrictions is expected to be most visible among young British adults once they reach legal purchasing age abroad. Over time, the practical effect of these differences may become clearer as the first cohort impacted by the UK measure begins travelling internationally as adults.
The policy is intended to reduce the number of people who start smoking at a young age. Photo credit: Richard Bradford/Shutterstock
The United Kingdom is set to introduce a permanent ban on the sale of tobacco to everyone born on or after January 1 2009, after Parliament approved one of the most significant anti-smoking measures in recent decades. The proposal is contained in the Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which has passed both the House of Commons and the House of Lords. The legislation is now awaiting Royal Assent, the final formal stage before becoming law.
If enacted, the measure will not ban smoking itself. Instead, it will make it unlawful for retailers to sell tobacco products to anyone in the affected age group at any point in their lives.
How the system will work
Rather than setting a single new minimum age, the law creates a rolling age limit that increases each year. At present, the legal age for buying tobacco in the UK is 18. Under the new system, that threshold will continue to rise by one year annually for those born from 2009 onwards.
This means adults who can already legally buy tobacco will keep that right. However, someone born in 2009 or later would never reach an age at which tobacco sales become lawful for them. The policy applies to cigarettes and other tobacco products covered by existing age-of-sale laws.
Parliamentary approval
The bill has been debated over several stages in both Houses of Parliament. Supporters argued that smoking remains one of the leading causes of preventable illness and death, while opponents raised questions about enforcement, personal choice and the long-term practicality of a generational sales ban.
Despite those objections, the legislation secured enough support to pass through both chambers.
Once Royal Assent is granted, ministers will be able to bring the new rules into force through secondary legislation and implementation guidance.
Why the government is introducing it
The policy is intended to reduce the number of people who start smoking at a young age and lower long-term demand for tobacco. Successive governments have sought to reduce smoking rates through taxation, advertising restrictions, standardised packaging, public health campaigns and indoor smoking bans.
The new measure goes further by attempting to prevent future generations from legally accessing tobacco products at all.Ministers have described the policy as part of a long-term public health strategy aimed at reducing smoking-related disease and pressure on health services.
What it means for retailers
Shops that sell tobacco will need to continue checking ages, but over time the system will become more complex because the legal age will no longer be fixed at 18.
Instead, eligibility will depend on a customer’s date of birth. Retailers are expected to receive updated guidance on age verification and enforcement once the law is formally enacted. Existing penalties for unlawful tobacco sales may also apply to businesses that breach the new rules.
Wider measures in the bill
The legislation also includes powers to regulate vaping and nicotine products. These provisions allow ministers to introduce future rules covering areas such as flavours, packaging, product displays and restrictions in certain public places. Specific measures would require further regulations before taking effect.
The inclusion of vaping controls reflects concern among policymakers about youth uptake of nicotine products, even as vaping is also used by some adults as an alternative to smoking.
Public debate
The proposal has attracted support from many health organisations, which argue that preventing young people from starting to smoke is more effective than trying to help established smokers quit later in life.
Critics, however, have questioned whether the law creates different rights for adults based solely on year of birth. Others have argued that enforcement may become harder over time if legal and illegal age groups exist side by side. There has also been debate over whether restrictions on legal sales could increase the illicit tobacco market, though the long-term effect remains uncertain.
International significance
The UK is among the first major countries to legislate for a permanent generational ban on tobacco sales. Similar proposals have been discussed elsewhere, but few have advanced as far through the legislative process.
Public health campaigners are likely to watch implementation closely, particularly whether the measure leads to lower smoking uptake among younger age groups.
What happens next
The final step is Royal Assent, after which the bill will become law. The government will then set commencement dates and publish enforcement details.
If implemented as planned, people born on or after 1 January 2009 will never be able to legally buy tobacco in the United Kingdom, marking a major change in the country’s approach to smoking policy.
Consumer groups have argued that cinemas are not primarily food businesses. Photo credit: Capturing Images/Shutterstock
A cinema chain in Algeciras has been fined €45,000 for preventing customers from entering screening rooms with food and drink bought outside the venue, according to reports published on Monday. The sanction was imposed on Yelmo Cines by the Territorial Delegation of Health and Consumer Affairs of the Junta de Andalucía in Cádiz after complaints supported by consumer organisation FACUA. The case concerns the company’s policy of restricting access to customers carrying products purchased elsewhere.
According to the published resolution, the offence was classified as serious under Andalucían consumer protection rules. In the region, serious infringements can carry financial penalties ranging from €10,001 to €100,000.
Consumer groups have argued that cinemas are not primarily food businesses and therefore cannot automatically require visitors to buy refreshments on site as a condition of access. They say blanket bans on outside items may place unfair limits on consumer choice. FACUA said it had backed complaints against the practice in several parts of Spain, arguing that customers should be free to decide where they buy snacks and drinks unless there are specific safety or hygiene grounds that justify restrictions.
Previous sanctions
Reports state this is the fourth penalty issued against the Yelmo cine chain over the same issue. Earlier fines cited in coverage include €25,000 in Almería, €12,000 in Sevilla, and €30,000 imposed by the Basque consumer authority Kontsumobide. Those cases also related to restrictions on customers carrying food or drink purchased outside the cinema.
The latest sanction in Algeciras is the highest of the reported fines linked to the practice.
Consumer law background
Spanish consumer law allows regional authorities to investigate business practices and issue penalties where rules are found to have been breached. Enforcement is handled by autonomous communities, meaning cases are decided by regional bodies rather than a single national regulator.
The Algeciras case was handled by the Andalucian administration through its provincial consumer authority in Cádiz. The classification of the offence as serious indicates the authority considered the conduct to go beyond a minor administrative issue, although the published reports do not detail whether aggravating factors were taken into account when setting the amount.
Position of cinemas
Most cinemas sell food and drink as an additional source of income, with popcorn, sweets and beverages forming part of their commercial offer. Some venues have rules limiting what can be taken into screening rooms, particularly where alcohol, hot food or glass containers are concerned. The issue in this case, however, concerns a general ban on products bought elsewhere rather than restrictions linked to safety or disturbance.
No wider industry response had been reported at the time of publication regarding whether operators would review admission policies following the latest fine.
Wider significance
The decision is likely to attract attention beyond Algeciras because similar policies are common in cinemas in Spain and other countries. The case may encourage further complaints from customers or prompt other regional authorities to review existing rules where bans are in place.
It also highlights the role of consumer organisations in bringing complaints that lead to regulatory action. FACUA has previously campaigned on pricing, contract terms and access conditions across several sectors.
What happens next
It was not immediately clear from published reports whether the fine would be appealed. Companies subject to administrative sanctions in Spain can usually challenge decisions through internal procedures and, if necessary, through the courts. Unless overturned or reduced, the penalty adds to a growing number of sanctions issued over the same practice.
For cinema-goers, the ruling does not automatically create a nationwide rule applying to every venue, as enforcement decisions are taken case by case and under regional powers. However, it reinforces the view of several consumer authorities that blanket bans on outside food and drink may breach consumer protection rules when the main service being sold is admission to watch a film. The case is one of the clearest recent examples of regulators intervening in cinema admission policies and may shape how operators approach food and drink rules in future.