On Air Now

After Hours

Midnight - 2:00am

Now Playing

Zucchero, Paul Young

Senza Una Donna (Without A Woman)

China launches three-astronaut rocket into space as new lunar race intensifies

China has launched the Shenzhou 23 rocket into space carrying three astronauts, in a mission that will take Beijing closer to its ambition for a moon landing in 2030.

The spacecraft took off from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China on Sunday, watched on by jubilant crowds waving the national flag.

The crew will conduct dozens of science projects and complete an in-orbit rotation - turning the spacecraft on its own axis while it travels around Earth - with the crew of Shenzhou 21, who have been at the Tiangong space station for more than 200 days.

One of the three astronauts on the Shenzhou 23 mission is scheduled to stay at the orbiting space station for a year, in what would be among the world's longest single stays in space.

The extended stay is for the purpose of exploring "human adaptability and performance limits" in space, state media reported, but it will be decided later which astronaut will be staying on.

A Russian astronaut holds the record after spending 14 and a half months in space in 1995.

The launch comes after the US launched its Artemis II mission in April, which saw astronauts circumvent the moon in the Orion spacecraft.

NASA plans to execute the first human moon landing since 1972 in the Artemis IV mission in 2028, as part of a push to establish a lunar base from which to reach Mars.

The US is seen as China's top space rival, with Beijing stepping up its space program in recent years by carrying out almost a dozen missions to its space station since 2021.

Read more from Sky News:
RAF jet has signal jammed near Russia
Surf photographer bitten by a 'shark or sea lion'

China developed the Tiangong space station, which means "heavenly palace", after the country was effectively barred from the International Space Station over US concerns about national security.

The US has warned that China plans ​to colonise and mine lunar territory and resources, claims that Beijing has strongly denied.

The astronauts on the Shenzhou mission, which translates as "divine vessel", are Zhu Yangzhu, the commander, Zhang Zhiyuan and Lai Ka-ying, who has also been identified by Chinese authorities as Li Jiaying, using the Mandarin version of her name.

Lai, who was born and raised in Hong Kong and has a doctoral degree in computer forensics, is the first astronaut from the city on a space mission.

With less than four years until its 2030 deadline to complete a moon landing, China faces the significant challenge of developing entirely new hardware and software specific to its lunar mission.

Sky News

(c) Sky News 2026: China launches three-astronaut rocket into space as new lunar race intensifies

Donate to Roch Valley Radio

 

Do you have a story for us? Want to tell us about something happening in our Borough?

Let us know by emailing newsdesk@rochvalleyradio.com

All contact will be treated in confidence.

More from World

Donate to Roch Valley Radio

 

Recently Played

Newsletter

Your subscription could not be saved. Please try again.
Your subscription has been successful.

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated.

   

Coming up next On Air

  • After Hours

    Midnight - 2:00am

    For the night owls, night workers and everyone still going while the rest of the town sleeps. Music, chat and company after dark.

  • Wide Awake Club

    2:00am - 5:00am

    For those who find themselves awake at 3am more often than they’d like. Calm music, understanding voices and quiet company.

  • Up Before the Alarm

    5:00am - 7:00am

    for early starters, commuters and anyone already on their second brew. Livelier music and new voices warming things up before breakfast.

  • Tuesday Breakfast

    7:00am - 10:00am

    getting you out of bed and to work and school with great music and headlines.

  • Music Mix

    10:00am - 11:00am

    Roch Valley Radio is with you 24/7 with our great mix of music!

  • Phil Salter's Tuesday Lunchtime Jukebox

    11:00am - 2:00pm

    here every Tuesday for 3 hours of classic tunes from the last 6 decades - it’s all random on the Jukebox and you can join in too.