The benefits of the race to be "China's own SpaceX" go beyond the stars

China Plus Published: 2018-09-07 22:42:06
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Note: The following is an edited translation of a commentary from the Chinese-language "Commentaries on International Affairs."

OneSpace took the honor of being the first private company in China to launch a commercial rocket in May 17th, 2018. [File photo: VCG]

OneSpace becomes the first private company in China to launch a commercial rocket on May 17th, 2018. [File photo: VCG]

The private Beijing-based aerospace company Space Honor Technology (also known as iSpace) successfully launched its Hyperbola-1Z rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in China on Wednesday. The launch vehicle delivered three private satellites into sub-orbital space, and the company also conducted some of their own scientific experiments. It was followed by a sub-orbital launch early on Friday morning by OneSpace, another China-based spaceflight company, of their Chongqing Liangjiang Star rocket from the same launch center.

For more than a year, news about China's private aerospace technology companies has been gradually emerging. Compared with OneSpace, which in May took the honor of being the first private company in China to launch a commercial rocket, Space Honor has kept a relatively low profile. But they are becoming a strong competitor in China’s commercial space industry, as this weeks’ launch was not a test, but a commercial launch with paying customers.  

So far, the launches by OneSpace and Space Honor have not been space flights in the true sense, as they have not reached orbital space. A sub-orbital space launch has a trajectory similar to that of a cannonball fired far into the sky: it doesn’t have the velocity to escape Earth’s gravity and remain in orbit. The next major milestone for the companies will be an orbital launch. OneSpace already completed testing of the second and third stages of its OS-M orbital launch vehicle, which is expected to be ready later this year.  

Until recently, governments led the development of space rockets. The inordinate amount of money and vast amount of resources that it required could only be drawn from the accumulated wealth of one of the world’s most advanced nations. And it took an immense political will to dedicate the nation’s resources towards such an ambitious goal. This is why, when United States President John F. Kennedy announced in 1962 that the Americans would land a man on the moon, he said "I believe we possess all the resources and talents necessary. But the facts of the matter are that we have never made the national decisions or marshaled the national resources required for such leadership. We have never specified long-range goals on an urgent time schedule, or managed our resources and our time so as to insure their fulfillment."

 The development of America’s space industry spurred developments in a range of high tech fields, including advanced materials science, microelectronics, chemicals, metallurgy. This had positive flow on effects for the country’s manufacturing sector and benefited American consumers, as some of the new technologies needed for the space program gradually moved into the consumer market. 

Now the United States has become the birthplace of the private aerospace industry. SpaceX's Dragon capsule has repeatedly docked with the International Space Station, and its liquid-fueled reusable rockets have incentivized Boeing and Lockheed Martin to enter into a partnership so they can compete. These achievements have been possible because America’s industrial development has reached a sufficiently advanced stage that private companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin can compete in the open market for the talent and high-grade precision products they need to build their own launchers.

By contrast, private aerospace companies in China are still launching sub-orbital flight using simple solid fuel rockets, because of the technical limitations of the domestic market in which they are operating. This is why the gap between the capabilities of the private commercial aerospace companies in the United States and China at a deeper level reflects the gap between the overall scientific and technological development of China and the United States.

That said, the players in China’s private space launch market have set themselves big goals. For example, Space Honor is planning to develop a liquid-fueled reusable rocket similar in principle to the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket. And both Space Honor and Blue Arrow, another domestic player,  are undertaking research on a methane-fueled engine. This is a new type of engine technology  currently being tackled by many countries including the United States. It will be better suited for use in a reusable rocket, and has strategic significance for the launch of interplanetary voyages.

Manufacturing the components of a methane burning engine poses a whole new set of technical challenges that need to be overcome. The development of this technology by companies such as Blue Arrow and Space Honor stands to benefit China’s manufacturing industry more broadly, just as the Apollo moon missions benefited America’s technological development. These benefits are of far greater historical significance for China's private aerospace industry than who gets crowned “China's own SpaceX".

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LU Xiankun Professor LU Xiankun is Managing Director of LEDECO Geneva and Associate Partner of IDEAS Centre Geneva. He is Emeritus Professor of China Institute for WTO Studies of the University of International Business and Economics (UIBE) and Wuhan University (WHU) of China and visiting professor or senior research fellow of some other universities and think tanks in China and Europe. He also sits in management of some international business associations and companies, including as Senior Vice President of Shenzhen UEB Technology LTD., a leading e-commerce company of China. Previously, Mr. LU was senior official of Chinese Ministry of Commerce and senior diplomat posted in Europe, including in Geneva as Counsellor and Head of Division of the Permanent Mission of China to the WTO and in Brussels as Commercial Secretary of the Permanent Mission of China to the EU. Benjamin Cavender Benjamin Cavender is a Shanghai based consultant with more than 11 years of experience helping companies understand consumer behavior and develop go to market strategies for China. He is a frequent speaker on economic and consumer trends in China and is often featured on CNBC, Bloomberg, and Channel News Asia. Sara Hsu Sara Hsu is an associate professor from the State University of New York at New Paltz. She is a regular commentator on Chinese economy. Xu Qinduo Xu Qinduo is CRI's former chief correspondent to Washington DC, the United States. He works as the producer, host and commentator for TODAY, a flagship talk show on current affairs. Mr. Xu contributes regularly to English-language newspapers including Shenzhen Daily and Global Times as well as Chinese-language radio and TV services. Lin Shaowen A radio person, Mr. Lin Shaowen is strongly interested in international relations and Chinese politics. As China is quite often misunderstood in the rest of the world, he feels the need to better present the true picture of the country, the policies and meanings. So he talks a lot and is often seen debating. Then friends find a critical Lin Shaowen criticizing and criticized. George N. Tzogopoulos Dr George N. Tzogopoulos is an expert in media and politics/international relations as well as Chinese affairs. He is Senior Research Fellow at the Centre International de Européenne (CIFE) and Visiting Lecturer at the European Institute affiliated with it and is teaching international relations at the Department of Law of the Democritus University of Thrace. George is the author of two books: US Foreign Policy in the European Media: Framing the Rise and Fall of Neoconservatism (IB TAURIS) and The Greek Crisis in the Media: Stereotyping in the International Press (Ashgate) as well as the founder of chinaandgreece.com, an institutional partner of CRI Greek. David Morris David Morris is the Pacific Islands Trade and Investment Commissioner in China, a former Australian diplomat and senior political adviser. Harvey Dzodin After a distinguished career in the US government and American media Dr. Harvey Dzodin is now a Beijing-based freelance columnist for several media outlets. While living in Beijing, he has published over 200 columns with an emphasis on arts, culture and the Belt & Road initiative. He is also a sought-after speaker and advisor in China and abroad. He currently serves as Nonresident Research Fellow of the think tank Center for China and Globalization and Senior Advisor of Tsinghua University National Image Research Center specializing in city branding. Dr. Dzodin was a political appointee of President Jimmy Carter and served as lawyer to a presidential commission. Upon the nomination of the White House and the US State Department he served at the United Nations Office in Vienna, Austria. He was Director and Vice President of the ABC Television in New York for more than two decades.