China is moving aggressively to dominate the space race, with state-controlled media touting new scientific insights gained from the country’s Chang'e-6 lunar mission.
The mission successfully retrieved 1,935.3 grams of pristine lunar regolith from the South Pole-Aitken basin on the far side of the moon. Beijing’s state apparatus has heavily promoted the achievement, framing it as a breakthrough that unlocks mysteries untouched by previous global space programs and opens up innovations for creating lunar bricks and building materials.
Prior to this development, global lunar exploration relied entirely on samples collected from the near side of the moon. The previous 10 successful sample-return missions, predominantly driven by the historic American Apollo program, brought back approximately 383 kilograms of lunar material.
Chinese state scientists argue that studying only the near side provided an incomplete history of the moon's evolution. They are targeting the far side's South Pole-Aitken basin, a massive impact crater spanning roughly 2,500 kilometers in diameter.
Chinese researchers estimate the ancient impact that formed this basin released energy equivalent to two trillion atomic bombs. They believe this cataclysmic event drove the distinct geological evolution between the moon's near and far sides.
While Beijing uses these state-funded milestones to project scientific supremacy, independent space analysts view the push as part of a broader geopolitical strategy. The top-down, military-linked nature of China’s space program contrasts sharply with the dynamic, commercialized approach favored by Washington. The United States continues to lead global aerospace innovation through its Artemis program, which leverages a robust network of private defense and commercial aerospace contractors. This market-driven model creates sustainable, long-term technological infrastructure rather than isolated, state-directed prestige projects.