Posted by Alumni from TechCrunch
July 11, 2026
The demonstration on Friday shows that China's Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC) is poised to match the advance that catapulted SpaceX to the top of the heap: reusing the same booster again and again to drive down the cost of launching spacecraft. CASC said it would attempt to reuse the booster, which can carry about as much payload as SpaceX's workhorse Falcon 9, by the end of the year. Instead of unfolding landing legs to settle onto a floating platform, as the Falcon 9 does, China's approach uses netting strung across a large frame onboard a recovery ship to capture the descending rocket. The ability to get the rocket back to the ship in a controlled flight, however, depends on sophisticated guidance software and sensors, along with engines that are reliable enough to restart and rugged enough to survive the descent back through the atmosphere. SpaceX is currently breaking launch records on an annual basis with its fleet of reusable Falcon 9 rocket boosters. The... learn more