China's powerful rocket to challenge NASA in 2030

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • Flipboard
  • Email
  • WhatsApp
China's Long March-9 would outstrip the 130 tonnes of NASA's Space Launch System (Representational image)
China's Long March-9 would outstrip the 130 tonnes of NASA's Space Launch System (Representational image)

New Delhi : China space agency is all set to outshine NASA with its super-powerful rocket that would be capable of delivering heavier payloads into low orbit, says a leading Chinese space expert on Monday.

“By 2030, the Long March-9 rocket under development will be able to carry 140 tonnes into low Earth orbit, where TV and earth observation satellites currently fly”, said Long Lehao, a senior official from the Chinese Academy of Engineering, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

This compares to the 20 tonnes deliverable by Europe's Ariane 5 rocket or the 64 tonnes by Elon Musk's Falcon Heavy, which in February propelled one of the US entrepreneur's red Tesla Roadster cars towards Mars.

China’s potent rocket would outstrip the 130 tonnes of NASA's Space Launch System, which is due to become operational in 2020.

China's Long March-9 would have a core stage measuring 10 metres in diameter and boast four powerful boosters, each with a diameter of five metres.

Xinhua said that the rocket could be used in manned lunar landings, deep space exploration or constructing a space-based solar power plant.

In addition, China is working on a reusable space rocket, which is expected to make its maiden flight in 2021. “The first stage and the boosters will be retrieved after a vertical landing”, Long said in a speech in Beijing.

China is hammering billions into its military-run space programme, with hopes of having a crewed space station by 2022, and of sending humans to the Moon in the near future.

The Asian superpower is looking to finally competing with the US and Russia after years of slowly matching their space milestones.

China is also scheduling to build a base on the moon, the state-run Global Times said in early March, citing the Communist Party chief of the China Academy of Space Technology.