China Daily (Hong Kong)

‘Solutions’ necessary for rocket accidents

Experts call for insurance plan after launch debris damages two houses

- By XU WEI xuwei@chinadaily.com.cn

Experts have called for an insurance plan to cover damage caused by space launches and re-entries after two houses were damaged by rocket wreckage in Hunan province on Monday.

The wreckage of the Long March rocket that carried the Chang’e- 3 lunar probe into space early on Monday fell in a village in Suining county, Hunan province, damaging two houses.

No casualties were caused, Xiaoxiang Morning Post reported on Tuesday.

The resident of one of the houses was compensate­d 10,800 yuan ($ 1,750), and the other received 5,200 yuan after authoritie­s assessed the damage, the report said.

Despite the timely response from authoritie­s, experts still believe the country needs an insurance plan to cover property losses, or even deaths or injuries, after space launches.

“Suppose the rocket wreckage hit a person; what would the authoritie­s do?” said Ren Zili, a professor of insurance laws at Beihang University.

“If the authority continues to handle the compensati­on by individual cases, there is never going to be a solution at the system level,” he said.

China’s space activities have intensifie­d since the start of the 12th Five-Year Plan (201115).

The number of launches per year has climbed to as many as 20, Zhang Jianheng, deputy general manager with the China Aerospace Science and Technology Cooperatio­n, told Xinhua News Agency.

Meanwhile, other countries and regions with active space programs such as the United States and the European Union have all establishe­d insurance plans to cover losses

Suppose the rocket wreckage hit a person; what would the authoritie­s do?” REN ZILI PROFESSOR OF INSURANCE LAWS AT BEIHANG UNIVERSITY

caused by space launches, he added. Ren said the country could borrow other countries’ practices.

“Compared with the cost of the whole space mission, damages caused to third parties are a tiny amount,” he said.

The launching of the Chang’e- 3 lunar probe had forced the Suining county authoritie­s to relocate 160,000 residents before the rocket blasted off.

More than 20,000 residents living near the Xichang Satellite Launch Center in Sichuan province, where the rocket was launched, were relocated to an auditorium at a primary school.

Yu Menglun, a rocket scientist and academicia­n at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told Beijing News that China’s Long March rockets are able to maintain a fixed region for the dropping of wreckage.

“Normally we select the scarcely populated areas. The scope of the region is in general 50 to 70 kilometers long and 30 km wide,” he said.

Meanwhile, the country is also researchin­g the possibilit­y of recoverabl­e rockets, he said.

“They’re like airplanes that could deliver space shuttles into orbit and then come back. There is no wreckage in the process and thus could provide a solution to the problem,” he added.

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