Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Bad weather postpones return of Chinese astronauts to Earth
ADVERTISEMENT


Beijing, April 29 (AFP) Apr 29, 2025
China postponed the return of three astronauts from its space station due to bad weather on Tuesday, delaying the mission until an "appropriate time", state media said.

The Shenzhou-19 crew have been working on Beijing's Tiangong space station since October and were scheduled to descend to Earth on Tuesday afternoon.

"Because the recent meteorological conditions at the Dongfeng landing site do not meet the mission requirements... (the mission) will be postponed and implemented at an appropriate time in the near future," Xinhua news agency said.

The delay would "ensure the lives, health and safety of the astronauts and the successful completion of the mission", it added, citing the China Manned Space Program (CMS).

The trio -- Cai Xuzhe, Song Lingdong and Wang Haoze -- have carried out experiments during their six-month stay on Tiangong and set a new record for the longest ever spacewalk.

Wang, 35, was China's only woman spaceflight engineer at the time of the launch, according to the CMS.

Commander Cai, a 48-year-old former air force pilot, previously served aboard Tiangong as part of the Shenzhou-14 mission in 2022.

Song, a 34-year-old one-time air force pilot, completes the group of spacefarers popularly dubbed "taikonauts" in China.

Their three replacements arrived on the space station last week after blasting off from a remote desert base in the country's northwest.

Beijing has ploughed billions of dollars into its space programme in recent years in an effort to achieve what President Xi Jinping describes as the Chinese people's "space dream".

The world's second-largest economy has bold plans to send a crewed mission to the Moon by the end of the decade and eventually build a base on the lunar surface.

China's space programme is the third to put humans in orbit and has also landed robotic rovers on Mars and the Moon as it catches up with the two most established cosmic powers, the United States and Russia.

Crewed by rotating teams of three astronauts every six months, Tiangong -- whose name means "celestial palace" in Chinese -- is its tour de force.


ADVERTISEMENT





Space News from SpaceDaily.com
Amazon launches first Starlink-rival internet satellites
The Starlink Takeover: Are Traditional Satellite Phones Obsolete?
How Space Exploration Opens Up New Horizons for Global Security and Governance

24/7 Energy News Coverage
UN chief says energy revolution unstoppable despite US pivot
ACES mission delivers record-breaking atomic clock to ISS for precision timekeeping
Cambodia approves cement factory in wildlife sanctuary

Military Space News, Nuclear Weapons, Missile Defense
New Zealand cracks down on foreign actors surveilling space activity
Confidence in NATO security guarantees plunges in Finland: survey
US lost 7 multi-million-dollar drones in Yemen area since March

24/7 News Coverage
The eukaryotic leap as a shift in life's genetic algorithm
China deploys army of fake NGOs at UN to intimidate critics: media probe
Carney's Liberals win Canada election defined by Trump



All rights reserved. Copyright Agence France-Presse. Sections of the information displayed on this page (dispatches, photographs, logos) are protected by intellectual property rights owned by Agence France-Presse. As a consequence, you may not copy, reproduce, modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any of the content of this section without the prior written consent of Agence France-Presse.