Why the Next Man on the Moon will be Chinese
November 26th, 2007 . by Julian Hewitt
(Not a NASA lift-off, but China’s Shenhua rocket that propelled the country’s first manned space mission in 2005. Photo: Xinhua. )
As the new millennium winds on, many people will look for concrete evidence that China has indeed arrived on the world superpower stage. If you are looking for a definitive date, then diarise the year 2020 when China plans to send its first man to the moon.
Thus far, there have only ever been 3 countries in the world to send humans to space. In 2005, China became the newest member of the 62.1 mile high club. It joined US astronauts and Russian cosmonauts when its taikonauts (from 太空 - ‘taikong’ or ‘outer space’) blasted into the heavens on a Shenzhou spaceship in 2005
USA and Russia both staked their claim to superpower status during the height of the cold war. Their competing space programmes signified the apex of global military and technological advancement. But it was only the USA that was able to sustain this advantage and put a man on the moon in 1969. In 1972, Eugene Cernan was the last man on the moon and both China and the USA are speculating that the year 2020 will see a lunar return after half a century’s absence. My money will be on China.
While China’s space ambitions are not a state-held secret, what is unique will be its method of delivery. Very simply, China is in dire need of a overarching goal to drive its national agenda once the Beijing Olympics and Shanghai Expo are resigned to the history books. It is my belief that China’s next big national goal will be its space programme. More specifically, this generation of Chinese citizens will be compelled into the 21st century by seeing a Chinese person on the moon in 13 years time.
The Chinese having a saying: “旧不去,新不来” which basically means if the old does not go out then the new can not come in. At the moment, Shanghai and Beijing are the hotbed of China‘s national development goals. These are driving China‘s modernizations and its rise to global prominence. Just about nothing happens in Beijing that is not linked to some pre-Olympics goal and ditto goes for Shanghai’s hosting of the World Expo in 2010.
In Beijing this means teaching taxi drivers to speak English, cutting down on the fake DVD sellers on the roadside, banning spitting in public, encouraging metro manners and getting people to walk on the right side of passage. It has also meant massive infrastructural investments in new subway lines, high-speed trains, airport modernizations and of course hugely impressive sports stadiums and related infrastructure.
In Shanghai, the dawning of the World Expo in 2010 has meant (amongst other things) the construction of an 18km bridge to Chongming Island, adding a few dozen more metro stations to the grid, increasing the font size of local street signs, testing the world’s first 4G cell phone network and demolishing 3km of prime land on the banks of the Huangpu River.
In this light, the Chinese government has shown strategic smartness to the highest degree. There is nothing to smooth-over the difficult transition of moving a fifth of the world’s population from a communist to market society quite like having big aspirational goals on the horizon. This type of socio-economic evolution is painful at best and creating a sense of ‘future hope and present progress for the greater good’ is an imperative chasm-crossing feat.
Ever since I arrived in China, I have had much respect for how well the Chinese are capitalizing on the opportunity of hosting 2 of the 3 biggest events in the world. In some ways, I am also seeing the many lost opportunities that South Africa seem to be passing in the night as our Soccer World Cup stage draws closer.
Sure, we will hold a successful World Cup beyond all the eternal pessimists of the world that sell newspapers or who we have thankfully forever banished to Australian and New Zealand shores. However, where are the big housing, education and crime goals that should surely be proactively addressed through such a unique cause to unify the nation around?
However, realizing the just how important the Olympics and World Expo are to China’s bigger national cause and global interests, I have always been fascinating to ask “What Next?” There is little else on the global calendar to compare. What China needs is a massive externally focused goal. These are its characteristics:
- Bigger than just a city centric goal like Shanghai or Beijing
- From 2010 to 2020. Beyond this is too intangible a time span
- Aspirational goal of the highest possible military and technological achievement
This goal needs to combine China’s unique assets: its immense financial capacity, the long-term planning capabilities of an autocratic government, large doses of national pride and vast pool of intellectual resources to draw on. There is nothing else as tangible or logical to accommodate all these facets as putting a man on the moon. Not only is this something to unite the country around, but it is something that says to the rest of the world that China has finally arrived.
There are some shortcomings to contend with. China is often judged for where it is going rather than where it is. The reality is that it is many (many, many) years behind the USA’s current space prowess. It is catching up really fast and it has the extra capacity to catch up even faster. Money, smart vision and a big national goal can get a man on the moon and this is what inspired the US in the 1960s.
The second issue is one of pride. Simply putting a man on the moon is doing what the USA did 50 years ago. The Chinese definitely don’t want to emphasize that for all their advancement, they are still miles behind the USA. So expect the rhetoric and tweaks to come in so as to differentiate the two space programmes. While China is not the threat that Russia was, it is still a proud nation to contend with.
As I write this, China’s first lunar probe, Chang’e, is circling the moon and I am sure that China’s top brass are already contemplating the next big thing. With this in mind, I am happy to stick my neck out to predict that:
- The space programme will be China’s next big national goal after 2010
- The next person on the moon will be Chinese
(Source: Xinhua. Hot off the press. One of China’s first ever lunar photos taken by Chang’e I and published on 26 Nov 07)


My teacher was telling me that astronaut is actually 宇航员.That first ”yu” stands for 宇宙yuzhou meaning universe. So astronauts are literally ‘’spaceship attendants”
I would also like to add that the Chinese space program is 100% controlled by the army. In case of war with America, let’s say over Taiwan, China would hypothetically send missiles into space destroying America’s satellites. America would then lose it’s ability to aim things like tomahawk missiles into things like bridges as well as a lot of it’s current military advantages. This strategy also includes hacker that would take down the US computers ect… China’s thinking is that it could take on the States in conventional warfare, but really can’t compete in sophistication and research (the best Chinese scientist all work in America…)
China is presently working on the third biggest rocket ever built, they are making it in Shanghai, in some ‘’space city’’somewhere in town.
Shrewd assessment of the space program. I agree on China’s need for a grand aspirational project.
It’s hard to get excited about another (relatively) pointless moonshot, when there are so many potentially useful projects like alternative fuels.
But nothing is quite as iconic as planting your flag hundreds of thousands of kilometers from home. 很有面子。
[…] mentioned in a previous posting, I predict that the next man on the moon will be Chinese. There are many assumptions that make sense for China to have a big, over-arching national goal - […]
Back in 2007 Julian Hewitt seemed to predict that the next man on the Moon would be Chinese. However, no Chinese person has to my knowledge volunteered to be the next one there and when.
I feel that NASA are dragging their feet about resuming lunar exploration. I don’t see why they don’t send any robots there. They’ve apparently managed to send robotic rovers to Mars, so why don’t they pop one over to the Moon?
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