The New Space Race - US vs China Audiobook By Richard Murch cover art

The New Space Race - US vs China

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The New Space Race - US vs China

By: Richard Murch
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The race is no longer about a single dramatic moment. It is a test of endurance that will take place over an indeterminate period of time, measured over decades — perhaps centuries. and International Studies commercially viable presence in space — from Earth orbit to the Moon to Mars — is likely to define the geopolitical order of the coming century.

Unlike the original Space Race of the Cold War era — a purely state-vs-state contest between NASA and the Soviet program — today's competition is fundamentally different in structure and stakes. Space Race 1.0 was a pure state-to-state competition.

This time, it is a hybrid model: SpaceX as a private-sector champion versus China's state-backed giants operating alongside a growing ecosystem of private companies. Baiguan As one expert put it, "This current space race is not about flags and footprints — this space race is going to be the country that builds the strongest commercial space industrial base."

China's ascent has been rapid and relentless. In 2025, China executed over 90 orbital launches, setting a new national record for orbital launches in a single year. In the last five years, China returned the first samples from the far side of the Moon, completed its own low-Earth orbit space station, and landed a rover on the surface of Mars.

China was the first nation to land on and conduct a sample return from the far side of the Moon. In 2025, China conducted what many suspect was the world's first satellite refueling operation in geosynchronous orbit. Since 2018, China has operated the world's first and only communications satellite in an orbit around the Earth-Moon L2 Lagrange point. Center for Strategic and International Studies

China is winning momentum in some headline areas — especially perception and lunar ambition — but the US still dominates in reusable launch operations and sheer annual launch volume. As US Senator Jim Inhofe put it starkly, "In a decade, the US has gone from the undisputed leader in space to just one of two equals in competition."

So who will win ...and When ???



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