<h2>China condemns high-tech outsourcing</h2><h3 class="Standfirst">By the Chinese space programme</h3><div class="Byline">By <a href="http://forms.theregister.co.uk/mail_author/?story_url=/2007/11/23/china_big_up_space_insource_sats/" title="Send email to the author">
Lewis Page</a> <small class="MoreByAuthor">$B"*(B <a href="http://search.theregister.co.uk/?author=Lewis%20Page" title="More stories from this site by Lewis Page">More by this author</a></small></div><div class="Date"><small>Published Friday 23rd November 2007 15:28 GMT
</small></div>
<p>The People's Republic of China will replace all its
imported communications and broadcast satellites with Chinese-made ones
by 2010, according to the chief of the country's National Space
Administration.</p>
<p>AFP reports that Sun Laiyan - PRC space chief - laid out the strategy in the government-controlled <em>Beijing News</em>.
It seems that China currently has 12 comms/broadcast spacecraft
operating, but only one was manufactured in the People's Republic.</p><div class="Ad" id="MidArticleSlot">"The rest were all bought from foreign companies," said Sun. He also
said the Chinese space agency would complete plans and studies within
three years for Moon landings and a joint probe to Mars in cooperation
with Russia in 2009.</div>
<p>The PRC put a probe into lunar orbit last month, intended to map the
entire surface of the Moon. Sun's agency has previously said it will
deliver a robot lander to the Moon by 2012 and an astronaut by 2020.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, other Chinese officials outlined plans to build a new
generation of heavy lift rockets, which would realise the PRC's
ambitious space programme.</p>
<p>"The technological issues of the next generation of carrier rockets have basically been solved," <a href="http://www.eetimes.com/rss/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=204200608&cid=RSSfeed_eetimes_newsRSS" target="_blank">
said</a> Zhang Yanhe of the Commission of Science Technology and Industry for National Defence.</p>
<p>Yanhe's defence-sector colleagues have been working hard on rocketry
in recent years in order to update the country's long range missile
forces, which are feeble in comparison to those of the other major
world powers.</p>
<p>Zhang said the new kit would "satisfy China's demands for
technological development and the peaceful use of space for the next 30
to 50 years".</p>
The AFP report is <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/afp/20071119/tc_afp/chinaspacesatellite_071119063217;_ylt=AiuY4i2UIDZ0cHMJ0kqhZjeNOrgF" target="_blank">here</a>