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China retrieves booster in reusable rocket breakthrough

Richard Connor with AP, Reuters
July 10, 2026

China has joined the small group of space powers that can now recover an orbital-class booster rocket. Developers of the landing method turned to a striking alternative to that used by existing players such as SpaceX.

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The booster coming in to land at an offshore recovery platform in South China Sea
The booster descends toward an offshore recovery platformImage: Xing Guangli/Xinhua/picture alliance

China on Friday successfully recovered the booster of an orbital-class rocket for the first time, marking a major advance in its push to develop reusable launch systems.

The Long March 10B lifted off from the Hainan commercial space launch site in southern China at 12:15 p.m. on Friday and placed a satellite into its designated orbit, state media reported.

What do we know about the Long March flight?

Around six minutes after the booster separated from the rocket's upper stage, it descended vertically toward an offshore platform and was captured by a net-based retrieval system.

Unlike the rockets used by US companies SpaceX and Blue Origin, which land autonomously on deployable legs, the Long March 10B uses four hooks to catch a net suspended above the sea platform.

China Academy of Launch Vehicle Technology expert Chen Muye said the approach simplifies the rocket's onboard structure, reduces its weight and could increase payload capacity.

China's Long March 10B lifts off from Hainan
China's Long March 10B lifts off from the Hainan commercial space launch siteImage: Yang Guanyu/Xinhua/picture alliance

"It is also highly adaptable to landing-point deviations, as coordinated ​net systems can effectively expand the capture window," Muye told state media agency Xinhua.

How is China planning to deploy reusable rockets?

China has spent nearly a decade developing reusable rocket technology as it seeks to cut launch costs and support its rapidly expanding commercial satellite networks.

Previous recovery attempts by private company LandSpace and the state-owned China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation failed during the final landing stage last year.

The Long March 10B booster is captured by a net-based recovery system on a sea platform following Friday's launch
The rocket was successfully retrieved using a net capture systemImage: Xing Guangli/Xinhua/picture alliance

The Long March 10B is also part of the broader Long March 10 family that China is developing for planned crewed lunar missions before 2030. Data from Friday's flight could help validate technology for the country's lunar program.

Shares in several Chinese aerospace companies surged following the test, with China Spacesat and China Satellite Communications reaching their daily trading limits.

The Long March 10B can carry at least 16 metric tons into low-Earth orbit and has been compared to SpaceX's Falcon 9, which has a maximum payload of 22.8 metric tons.

SpaceX first landed a Falcon 9 booster following an orbital mission in December 2015. It now launches the rocket around 150 times a year, frequently reusing individual boosters dozens of times.

Edited by: Dmytro Hubenko

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Richard Connor
Richard Connor Reporting on stories from around the world, with a particular focus on Europe — especially Germany.