Issue 138

CHINA: Quest for Reusable Rocket Technology

By Dr. Larissa Beavers 26 Jan 2026: China is accelerating efforts to master reusable rocket technology, a capability critical to lowering launch costs and increasing mission tempo. According to a Space Daily report by Riko Seibo, China is completing an offshore platform at Oriental Aerospace Port in Haiyang to support…

By Dr. Larissa Beavers

26 Jan 2026: China is accelerating efforts to master reusable rocket technology, a capability critical to lowering launch costs and increasing mission tempo. According to a Space Daily report by Riko Seibo, China is completing an offshore platform at Oriental Aerospace Port in Haiyang to support testing, launches, and recovery of reusable liquid- propellant rockets, with trial operations expected in early February 2026. Additional reporting by the Global Times indicates this push spans both state and commercial sectors, with early reusable launches, recovery infrastructure, and engine development signaling a broader shift away from expendable systems and toward competitiveness with global leaders in reusable launch.

Previous reporting on China’s ambitions for reusable rocket technology:

  • Early recovery demonstrations — Startups such as Space Epoch have achieved controlled ocean soft landings of rocket boosters in June 2025.
  • Strategic competition — 2025 Defense One reporting suggests China’s reusable launch efforts are part of a broader strategic push to close the gap with established reusable launch leaders and capture more of the commercial launch and satellite constellation markets.
  • Offshore reuse infrastructure — The Haiyang platform enables liquid rocket launch and recovery testing.
  • First orbital reuse attempt — LandSpace’s Zhuque-3 marked China’s first orbital flight of a reusable liquid rocket, drawing substantial global attention.
  • Recovery network expansion — A Hangzhou offshore base will support booster inspection and reuse.
  • Commercial momentum — National aerospace exhibitions highlight rapid progress in reusable launch systems.
  • PH-1 suborbital test flight — On 13 Jan 26, CAS Space advances its reusable spacecraft ambitions by carrying out the PH-1 maiden suborbital flight.
  • Reusable booster development — On 19 Jan 2026, Long March 12B testing shows continued investment in first-stage reuse.
  • Beyond satellites — China Daily report, Zhao Lei states that successful reusable system development supports ambitions beyond satellite launches, including suborbital spaceflight, signaling a diversified trajectory for the space economy.


Ground breaking: Hangzhou Global Times


Space Epoch booster water landing Universe Today


ZQ-3 Y1 maiden flight Global Times