BEIJING (AP) — China plans
to launch space labs and manned ships and prepare to build space stations over
the next five years, according to a plan released Thursday that shows the
country's space program is gathering momentum.
China has already said its
eventual goals are to have a space station and put an astronaut on the moon. It
has made methodical progress with its ambitious lunar and human spaceflight
programs, but its latest five-year plan beginning next year signals an acceleration.
By the end of 2016, China will
launch space laboratories, manned spaceship and ship freighters, and make
technological preparations for the construction of space stations, according to
the white paper setting out China's space progress and future missions.
China's space program has
already made major breakthroughs in a relatively short time, although it lags
far behind the United States and Russia in space technology and experience.
The country will continue
exploring the moon using probes, start gathering samples of the moon's surface,
and "push forward its exploration of planets, asteroids and the sun."
It will use spacecraft to study
the properties of black holes and begin monitoring space debris and small
near-Earth celestial bodies and build a system to protect spacecraft from
debris.
The paper also says China will
improve its launch vehicles, improve its communications, broadcasting and
meteorological satellites and develop a global satellite navigation system,
intended to rival the United States' dominant global positioning system (GPS)
network.
China places great emphasis on
the development of its space industry, which is seen as a symbol of national
prestige.
Its space principles —
including peaceful development, enhancing international cooperation and deep
space exploration — are largely unchanged from its previous two documents
detailing the progress of China's space missions, released in 2000 and 2006.
In 2003, China became the third
country behind the U.S. and Russia to launch a man into space and, five years
later, completed a spacewalk. Toward the end of this year, it demonstrated
automated docking between its Shenzhou 8 craft and the Tiangong 1 module, which
will form part of a future space laboratory.
In 2007, it launched its first
lunar probe, Chang'e-1, which orbited the moon, collecting data and a complete
map of the moon.
Since 2006, China's Long March
rockets have successfully launched 67 times, sending 79 spacecraft into orbit.
Some elements of China's
program, notably the firing of a ground-based missile into one of its dead
satellites four years ago, have alarmed American officials and others who say
such moves could set off a race to militarize space. That the program is run by
the military has made the U.S. reluctant to cooperate with China in space, even
though the latter insists its program is purely for peaceful ends.
"China always adheres to
the use of outer space for peaceful purposes, and opposes weaponization or any
arms race in outer space," Thursday's white paper states.
The Chinese government's policy
is to "reinforce" space cooperation with developing countries and
"value" space cooperation with developed countries. The paper lists
cooperation between China and countries including Russia, Brazil, France and
Britain, and says of the United States: NASA's director visited China "and
the two sides will continue to make dialogue regarding the space field."
LOUISE WATT | AP
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