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China Streamlines Lunar Programs to Accelerate Moon Race

By Emerson Gray · Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Finn's Take· TL;DR
  • China consolidated crewed and uncrewed lunar programs to accelerate moon landing plans, targeting 2029-2030 versus NASA's delayed Artemis timeline.
  • Combined program leverages decades of proven expertise from Chang'e missions and human spaceflight, eliminating redundancies to fast-track astronaut lunar surface deployment.
  • China plans permanent International Lunar Research Station at south pole by 2035, positioning itself to establish rules governing future space exploration.
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Strategic Consolidation Follows SpaceX Success

On Saturday – the day after the US company SpaceX successfully launched its largest and most powerful Starship – the China Manned Space Agency unveiled further details about its plans to integrate its crewed and uncrewed lunar landing programmes into a single mission. This strategic move represents China's most significant restructuring of its space capabilities since launching its lunar exploration program two decades ago.

The timing appears deliberate. The purpose was "to fully leverage the technical foundations and practical experience accumulated over decades through crewed space programmes and the Chang'e lunar exploration missions", agency spokesman Zhang Jingbo told a press conference at the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre. By combining these previously separate programs, China aims to eliminate redundancies and accelerate its timeline for putting astronauts on the lunar surface.

Zhou Yaqiang, a senior engineer at the China Manned Space Agency, told reporters that the process of "combining experiences and expertise" from the various missions was "progressing smoothly". This integration builds on China's remarkable lunar achievements, including the world's first far side landing (Chang'e 4), longest-lived rover (Yutu-2), and sample returns (Chang'e 5 and 6).

Racing Against American Ambitions

The consolidation comes as both nations face mounting pressure to achieve their lunar goals. China plans a crewed lunar landing in 2029 or 2030, using the Mengzhou orbiter and Lanyue lander, each launched by a super heavy-lift Long March 10 rocket. Meanwhile, NASA's Artemis program faces significant delays, with "Unless something changes, it is highly unlikely the United States will beat China's projected timeline to the moon's surface," former Trump administration NASA chief Jim Bridenstine testified before the U.S. Senate in September.

The American challenges stem largely from SpaceX's Starship development hurdles. Yet Starship has suffered a string of testing mishaps this year that have put it well behind schedule. It hasn't even orbited Earth yet, let alone the moon. This creates an opening for China's more methodical approach to gain the upper hand in lunar exploration.

China's program benefits from centralized planning and proven technology. On June 25, 2024, the Chang'e 6 probe returned 1,935 grams of material collected from the far side of the Moon-the first samples ever obtained from that hemisphere. The mission, which lasted 53 days, employed the Queqiao 2 relay satellite for communication support and executed a complex series of maneuvers involving its lander, ascender, and returner modules.

Building Lunar Infrastructure

Beyond individual missions, China envisions comprehensive lunar development. China aims to construct the International Lunar Research Station at the lunar south pole from 2031, collaborating with Roscosmos and 11 other countries. This permanent base represents a fundamental shift from short-term exploration to long-term lunar industrialization.

The upcoming missions will lay crucial groundwork for this vision. China plans Chang'e 7 (late 2026) and Chang'e 8 (2028), which will explore the lunar south pole for ice, using multi-landing flying probes; the latter will test in situ resource utilization. These capabilities could prove decisive in establishing sustainable lunar operations.

China's space plans aim for a permanent lunar base by 2035, developed through the International Lunar Research Station (ILRS) partnership. The base will include a nuclear reactor to power long-term lunar operations, supplementing solar arrays and surface infrastructure.

The Stakes Beyond Exploration

This lunar competition extends far beyond scientific achievement or national prestige. At stake are not only bragging rights, some fear, but also the ability to set the rules of the road for the future on the moon, on Mars and in the rest of the solar system. The nation that establishes the first permanent lunar presence will likely influence how space resources are governed and utilized.

China's program merger signals confidence in its technological approach and timeline. While maintaining the official Chinese position, saying that the country was committed to the peaceful use of space, the strategic consolidation positions China to potentially achieve lunar dominance through steady, incremental progress rather than revolutionary breakthroughs.

As both nations push toward their lunar goals, the coming years will determine whether America's technological ambitions or China's methodical execution proves more effective in the new space race. The winner may well shape humanity's future beyond Earth.

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