Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China?

Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China? - White Rocket

China is an active spacefaring nation, with launches scheduled on a monthly basis from four major launch sites around the country. The newest of these, in Wenchang, is even conveniently located on subtropical resort island Hainan and apparently a major local tourist attraction.

However, is it possible for non-Chinese nationals to view rocket launches at these sites? The oldest and largest site, Jiuquan, has historically been completely off limits to foreigners, and while this news story from 2007 (!) implies all four are in various stages of opening up, the bureaucracy still sounds formidable ("Since satellite launches have strict requirements over a variety of issues, the launch center will not allow tourists to watch the scene unless all necessary precautions are taken.") and concrete information in English on what's possible, where to apply etc seems very thin on the ground.

(Also, I know China at time of writing basically bans inbound tourists due to COVID-19 concerns, but for the purposes of this question, please assume the visitor is already in the country.)






Pictures about "Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China?"

Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China? - Time Lapse Photography of Taking-off Rocket
Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China? - Free stock photo of discovery, launch, liftoff
Is it possible for foreigners to watch rocket launches in China? - Space Rocket Launching



When did China first go into space?

China put its first satellite into orbit in 1970 - as it went through massive disruptions caused by the Cultural Revolution. The only other powers to have gone into space by that stage were the US, the Soviet Union, France and Japan. In the past 10 years, China has launched more than 200 rockets.

Did China set of a rocket?

China launched 2 rockets back-to-back just ahead of astronauts' landing. The double rocket launch set the stage for a successful Shenzhou 13 crew landing.

What is the name of the Chinese rocket?

The rockets are named after the Chinese Red Army's 1934\u201335 Long March during the Chinese Civil War....Long March (rocket family)Long MarchSimplified Chinese\u957f\u5f81\u7cfb\u5217\u8fd0\u8f7d\u706b\u7badTranscriptions Standard Mandarin Hanyu Pinyin Ch\xe1ngzh\u0113ng X\xecli\xe8 Y\xf9nz\xe0i Hu\u01d2ji\xe0n3 more rows

Do the Chinese have a space shuttle?

China's Tengyun is believed to be China's answer to the American OTV as well as its own ambition at possessing the technology that allows it to carry out cheaper space missions and send satellites as frequently as it would like, by using the same vehicle.




Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Pixabay, Pixabay, SpaceX, Pixabay