

For the second time this month, a Chinese reusable rocket reached low-Earth orbit on its maiden flight Monday, overcoming the long odds that typically accompany new launch vehicle debuts.
The inaugural Long March 12A, similar in height and diameter to SpaceX’s Falcon 9 workhorse, launched from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center at 9:00 pm EST Monday (02:00 UTC Tuesday).
Under ten minutes later, the methane-fueled first-stage booster plummeted through the atmosphere at supersonic speed, striking a remote area roughly 200 miles downrange from the Jiuquan spaceport in northwest China. The booster did not perform a braking burn to slow for touchdown at the prepared site near the edge of the Gobi Desert.
The China Aerospace Science and Technology Corporation (CASC), the state-owned enterprise that leads the country’s space sector, said the Long March 12A’s upper stage behaved as expected, reaching the mission’s “predetermined orbit.”
“The first stage failed to be successfully recovered,” the corporation said in a statement. “The specific reasons are currently under further analysis and investigation.”
A fleet of reusable rockets
This outcome mirrors the results of the maiden flight of another medium-class Chinese vehicle, the Zhuque-3, on December 2. Built by the private startup LandSpace and comparable in size and performance to the Long March 12A, the Zhuque-3 also reached orbit on its first launch, but its recoverable booster crashed during a downrange landing attempt. The Zhuque-3’s first stage came down next to its landing zone, while the Long March 12A appears to have missed by at least a few miles.
“Although this mission did not achieve the planned recovery of the rocket’s first stage, it gathered vital engineering data under actual flight conditions, laying an important foundation for subsequent launches and dependable stage recoveries,” CASC said. “The research and development team will promptly carry out a comprehensive review and technical analysis of this test, fully investigate the cause of the failure, continuously refine the recovery plan, and continue progressing verification of reusable technologies.”











