Beijing Building Satellite Town for Booming Space Industry
By Reuters | 17 Apr, 2026
A hub for China's satellite manufacturers and operators will be completed in the second half of 2026.
People look at the city skyline at a rooftop of a building in Beijing, China October 18, 2025. REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
The core area of Beijing's Satellite Town, designed as a hub for satellite manufacturers and operators, will be completed in the second half of 2026, state-owned media Beijing Daily reported on Saturday.
- Commercial launches now account for over 60% of all space launches and a number of companies are rushing to go public, Beijing Daily said.
- Gao Yibin, head of the Strategic Research Department at Future Aerospace, said with the acceleration of launch approvals, the localisation of components and the continued injection of capital by industrial funds, China's trillion-yuan commercial space market is moving towards standardisation and scale
- “The accelerated implementation of scenarios such as low-Earth orbit constellation networking, satellite internet, space computing power, and 6G air-space-ground integration suggests sustained growth is expected in 2026,” said Gao.
- The Beijing Satellite Town will provide the support to develop the aerospace industry by fostering industrial clustering and enabling talent, capital and technology to flow efficiently.
(Reporting by Mei Mei ChuEditing by Shri Navaratnam)
Recent Articles
- Newsom Says Trump Sending Agents to Homes of Friends, Family
- North Korea Touts Industrial ‘Miracles’ as Output Exceeds Targets
- Global EV Registrations Rose 3% in May
- China's Industrial Output Grew Faster in May but Retail Sales and Investment Slowed
- Asia Markets Temperate in Assessing Likely Delayed Impact of Iran Deal
- Japan's Auto Shops Unlikely to See Quick Relief from US-Iran Deal
- Hermanos Coreanos, Clarkson Crowned, Jung Hoo Lee Sets Record
- California Congressman Dave Min Presses Trump on “Pay-To-Play” Pardons
- China's Heavy Truck Electrification to Hit Diesel Demand
- Trump Push into Highly Dangerous Plutonium Unlikely to Fix US Nuclear Fuel Crunch
