China's 2026-2030 Space Roadmap: Mining Ice, Fueling Rockets, Shaping Global Rules
China's 2026-30 space plan marks a major shift in the global space race, placing bold emphasis on space mining, orbital data centers and expanded space tourism ambitions.
Central Planning Meets Space Strategy: A New Era for 2026-2030
Central planning has long stood at the heart of communist governance. At five-year intervals, state authorities set out national objectives, mapping priorities that may range from reducing infant mortality to boosting crop production. China, the world's largest communist-run state, has now unveiled its fifteenth five-year plan, outlining its ambitions for 2026-2030. Accompanied by a statement from the China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), the strategy places striking emphasis on the expansion of the country's space capabilities.
Among the most culturally resonant elements of the announcement is the Tiangong Kaiwu initiative — a space mining programme named after a seminal 17th-century Ming Dynasty encyclopedia. Often translated as "The Exploitation of the Works of Nature", the project centers on extracting water ice from extraterrestrial resources.
Why China Is Targeting Water in Space
While many Western ventures are targeting the return of rare metals such as platinum and palladium to Earth, China's approach prioritizes water. Beyond its obvious life-sustaining value, water can be separated into hydrogen and oxygen to create rocket fuel. Over the next five years, the focus will rest on feasibility studies and technological demonstrations, including robotic drilling systems and in-orbit processing, laying the groundwork for potential large-scale industrial mining in the foreseeable future.
Space Mining Strategy: Why Water Matters More Than Platinum
Strategic Priorities in the Tiangong Kaiwu Initiative
- Extraction of water ice from space resources
- Development of robotic drilling systems
- In-orbit processing technologies
- Long-term goal of industrial-scale space mining
Unlike Western rare-metal missions, China's water-first strategy reflects long-term sustainability and in-space refueling capability.
Orbital Data Centers: Gigawatt-Level Space Digital Infrastructure
From a technical perspective, the most daring proposal within the plan may prove the hardest to realize. Considerable excitement surrounds the concept of placing data centers in orbit and the strategy explicitly references the construction of "gigawatt-level space digital infrastructure" as a central objective. Space does offer notable advantages over terrestrial facilities—near-continuous sunlight and freedom from competing urban power demands among them.
Yet one formidable obstacle remains unresolved: heat. Although space is often described as cold, its defining feature is vacuum. On Earth, data centers depend upon vast cooling systems that circulate air or water across processors, removing excess heat and preventing catastrophic failure. In orbit, such convective cooling is impossible. Even if air or liquid were circulated internally, there would be no external medium to disperse the heat.
The only viable solution would be to radiate waste energy away in the form of infrared light. In practical engineering terms, that would necessitate radiators spanning areas comparable to football pitches — hardware far beyond the lifting capacity of any existing launch system. As matters stand, the ambition appears less a near-term deliverable and more a bold technological statement.
Space Tourism: China's Rivalry with SpaceX Intensifies
Another clear front in the rivalry with SpaceX and its Western private-sector counterparts is space tourism. Chinese organizations may hold a structural advantage, as they operate their own space station — a facility that could, in time, function as an orbital "Hotel", much as SpaceX has transported private visitors to the International Space Station.
In the immediate term, however, China appears set to follow the same trajectory once taken by SpaceX and Blue Origin: suborbital flights carrying passengers beyond the Kármán line. On 12 January, CAS Space — a commercial offshoot of the Chinese Academy of Sciences — tested a tourist vehicle designed precisely for that purpose.
China's Role in Global Space Traffic Management
Perhaps the most ambiguous objective in the accompanying press release is the pledge to "strengthen China's role in shaping international regulations for space traffic management". As the world's second-largest economy, China is signaling its intention to play a greater part in setting the standards that will govern orbital operations. Whether that means creating parallel frameworks or working within existing Western-led systems remains uncertain.
Strategic Outlook: A Funded Commitment to Space Supremacy
Five-year plans transform ambition into funded commitment. At a time when American space science budgets face significant reductions, the contrast is striking. As China accelerates its technological ascent, domestic organizations will inevitably look to this roadmap for direction — and global competitors be wise to do the same.
Environmental Impact & Sustainability

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