The People’s Republic of China last week became one of only three countries to successfully land a spacecraft on Mars. The Tianwen-1 mission, China’s first mission beyond the Earth-moon system, deployed the Zhurong lander on the Martian surface. That’s part of the Chinese plan for the Tianwen-1 mission to “orbit, land, rove.” The Zhurong rover appears to be an updated version of the Yutu (Jade Rabbit) rover that the Chinese have deployed on the surface of the moon.
Once the Zhurong debarks from its carrier, it will spend about 90 days exploring its surroundings in the area of Utopia Planitia. That region has been of interest to astronomers because of the possibility of ice beneath the immediate surface. A similar interest is thought to have motivated the Chinese to land the Chang’e-4 probe on the lunar south pole—to look for possible ice deposits.
Heritage Senior Research Fellow Dean Cheng writes that this choice of Martian landing area underscores the reality that China has a serious space program, one that is arguably the closest competitor to NASA’s. The Tianwen-1 mission also highlights that China’s space technology is increasingly competitive with that of the United States. China is building its own space station, and fields a range of satellite constellations that provide earth observation, navigation and timing signals, and weather reporting.
With the Zhurong rover, Beijing has achieved something that until now has been a wholly American preserve—beaming pictures of Mars back to Earth. (Notably, the only other nation to land a probe on Mars, Russia, could only manage a single partial image before its Mars-3 probe failed, back in 1971.) Indeed, given reports that the Zhurong will collect rocks for a Martian sample-retrieval mission, it’s likely that Beijing is hoping to be the first nation to bring Martian rocks back to Earth.
That’s in part because the Chinese see space as not only an area for technological competition, but political competition, as well. Beijing has long made clear that its space program generates a variety of non-space-related benefits. It reinforces the legitimacy of the Chinese Communist Party, justifying its rule. It brings political as well as technological prestige, reminding other nations of what China can achieve. It has military implications, as space technology is very much a dual-use set of technologies.