The head of China's space agency has confirmed that his country has no plans
to put a man on the Moon.
Sun Laiyan, chief of the
China
National Space Administration, said that the hurdles to manned space
exploration are too great for the time being, and that his agency will
concentrate on mechanical exploration.
"I have read reports by foreign media saying that China would carry a manned
Moon landing in 2020, but I do not think there has been such a plan," Sun told
the state run
Xinhua
News Agency at a press conference in Beijing.
"So far, our Moon mission only includes unmanned probes. But I believe one
day China will send its own astronauts to land on the Moon. I hope I can see it
happen."
The statement contradicts earlier reports that China will attempt to put men on
the Moon.
Sun spoke as the first pictures of the lunar surface from China's
Chang'e-1
satellite were unveiled to the media. The satellite will survey the Moon from a
height of 200km and aims to map the entire body.
"The success of the Chang'e-1 project has helped us train a professional team
and will support the mission's next aim of landing a rover on the moon," he
said.
A remote controlled Moon rover will land in 2012 and a second mission in 2017
will try to bring back rock samples.
China has big plans for remote exploration of space. The country is building
a new space
centre on the island province of Hainan in the South China Sea, and in 2005
became the third nation to put astronauts into space.
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