Photo: Xinhua

A powerful blast-off in the Yellow Sea on Wednesday afternoon has shot China into the same elite league as the US and Russia – countries capable of catapulting rockets and payloads offshore into space.

A Long March 11 rocket lifted off from a mobile launchpad floating in the Yellow Sea off eastern China’s Shandong province, delivering as many as five commercial satellites and two others, allegedly containing experimental technology for weather forecasting and ship navigation systems, into orbit.

Xinhua reported that China’s first successful launch at sea was also the 306th Long March rocket launch, which ascended aboard a privately owned platform, a converted barge that was larger than a standard soccer field.

The Long March 11, which is 21 meters tall and has a diameter of 2 meters, is a solid-propellant carrier rocket. It is designed with the flexibility to launch on short notice and can launch from vehicles, and now, ships.

A Long March 11 rocket blasted off from a platform in the Yellow Sea on Wednesday. Photos: Xinhua

Experts say sea launches offer advantages such as the ability to position closer to the Equator. For instance, China can sail its launch ships all the way offshore to the center of the South China Sea, closer to the Equator, so that rockets need less fuel and thus cutting overall costs, especially when launching low-inclination satellites. Another virtue is that seaborne launches also reduce the danger of damage on the ground from falling rocket debris.

The uneventful launch was yet another demonstration of China’s prowess in aerospace and maritime technology.

Since its first manned space mission in 2003, China has continued to edge closer to the US and Russia in a three-way space race, with numerous launches and missions over the decade sending more taikonauts into space, two space stations into orbit and multiple probes and rovers to the moon. The last of these was the first-ever mission to the dark side of the moon, and the country is also working toward a mid-2020s launch to send a probe to Mars.

South Korea also borders the Yellow Sea and Japan is not far away, so the launch made headlines in both countries.

China’s neighbors now look warily at the potential military applications of such sea-launch technologies, given the fact that Wednesday’s launch was conducted by the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corp, which is also heavily involved in the defense sector and a major contractor for the People’s Liberation Army.

Join the Conversation

1187 Comments

  1. I just could not go away your web site before suggesting that I extremely loved the usual information a person provide to your visitors? Is gonna be back continuously in order to check up on new posts.

  2. Thanks for sharing the information. I found the information very useful. That’s a awesome story you posted. I will come back to scan some more.

  3. I discovered your weblog site on google and verify just a few of your early posts. Proceed to maintain up the very good operate. I simply further up your RSS feed to my MSN News Reader.

  4. I carry on listening to the news update talk about getting boundless online grant applications so I have been looking around for the finest site to get one. Could you tell me please, where could i find some?

  5. After examine just a few of the blog posts in your web site now, and I really like your approach of blogging. I bookmarked it to my bookmark web site list and will be checking back soon. Pls take a look at my site as nicely and let me know what you think.

  6. Simply a smiling visitor here to share the love (:, btw outstanding design. “Better by far you should forget and smile than that you should remember and be sad.” by Christina Georgina Rossetti.

  7. Thank you for the sensible critique. Me and my neighbor were just preparing to do a little research on this. We got a grab a book from our area library but I think I learned more clear from this post. I’m very glad to see such fantastic info being shared freely out there.