Global Times

Market launch

Commercial aerospace industry looks set to take off in China

- By Zhao Yusha

Commercial exploratio­n of space will become an unstoppabl­e trend as more strong private start-ups enter the commercial aerospace industry in China, said experts.

As the world held its breath in anticipati­on of SpaceX’s launch of Falcon Heavy, a Chinese individual­ly-funded satellite was launched last week, capable of operating in space for one year to take and transmit pictures and videos of the universe.

The FMN 1 is a panoramic-camera CubeSat, a type of miniaturiz­ed satellite made up of multiple cubic units, and will be used to help members of the public observe outer space, according to a statement from China Great Wall Industry Corp, which provided the launch service, China National Radio (CNR) reported on Sunday.

The satellite was carried on a Long March 2D carrier rocket at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northweste­rn China, along with the much larger ZH 1 - the nation’s first seismo-electromag­netic satellite, which can help scientists better study earthquake­s - as well as five other small satellites like the FMN 1, said the report.

It said that the satellite program was funded solely by real estate tycoon Feng Lun, chairman of Beijing-based Vantone Holdings, who spent 5 million yuan ($800,000) on the launch.

While this launch is only an exploratio­n with the aim of promoting charity and education, future satellite launches will seek to make profits, Feng was quoted by CNR as saying.

Feng could not be reached for comment as of press time and Vantone told the Global Times on Tuesday that he no longer works at the company. He was quoted earlier by CNR as saying that he hoped the satellite would enable the public to get closer to space and also give him a new platform for mass communicat­ion. He also said the satellite would fly over China three times a day and will be able to transmit data back to the ground at those times.

Lack of resources

However, Jiao Weixin, a space science professor at Peking University, told the Global Times on Wednesday that private Chinese firms have less involvemen­t in the aerospace industry since they need more resources and talent than a single private enterprise can gather.

If a private company wants to launch a satellite, it has to first get approval from the authoritie­s, then find and pay for a launch service before being able actually to launch.

According to the CNR report, the approval for the FMN 1 only took half a year.

Some Chinese private companies are gradually exploring the space market amid the deepening of militaryci­vilian integratio­n, Wang Yanan, deputy editor of Aerospace Knowledge magazine, told the Global Times.

China encourages private companies to jointly explore space, as some of them are getting stronger, said Wang.

In 2014, the State Council, China’s cabinet, formally announced it would allow private companies to research, manufactur­e and launch as well as operate commercial satellites, prompting a batch of Chinese entreprene­urs to pitch ideas in the industry.

In addition to the easing of entry restrictio­ns, the government proposed in 2015 the strategy of integratin­g civilian and military cooperatio­n in technology to promote the country’s space programs, which has led to the rapid developmen­t of China’s private space sector.

Costly business

Wang noted that cooperatin­g with national agencies will help these private companies grow faster, and the two will be able to complement each other.

However, funding is a major challenge for the developmen­t of domestic space companies, as they have to make enormous investment­s in research and manufactur­ing, and it takes a long time to see a return, said Jiao.

It costs millions of yuan to launch a micro-nano satellite, and hundreds of millions for a large satellite, so Feng’s case is very rare, he said.

While China’s space start-ups are still in the nascent developmen­t stage, commercial exploratio­n of space is an unstoppabl­e trend, said Jiao, adding that the current number of launch bases and rockets doesn’t meet the demand for launching commercial satellites. As a result, many private companies are building their own launch bases and rockets.

On January 22, Beijing-based start-up One Space Technology Co. successful­ly completed the test for its self-developed liquid attitude control engine of its OS-M rockets. And in coming June, it will launch its first OS-X rocket, which is designed for suborbital flights in order to provide high-altitude research and test services, following a successful series of tests on its solid-propellant engine in December 2017.

Another Beijing-based company, LandSpace Technology, is also expected to debut its LandSpace-1 rocket this year. In January 2017, LandSpace signed a contract with Denmark-based satellite manufactur­er GOMspace, becoming the first Chinese company to develop its own commercial rockets that will provide services to the internatio­nal market.

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? SpaceX’s newest rocket, the Falcon Heavy lifts off on it first demonstrat­ion flight. The rocket leapt off Pad 39A at 3:45 pm at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA.
Photo: IC SpaceX’s newest rocket, the Falcon Heavy lifts off on it first demonstrat­ion flight. The rocket leapt off Pad 39A at 3:45 pm at the Kennedy Space Center, Florida, USA.

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