Since its birth in 1956, China's space program
has gone through several important stages of development -- arduous pioneering,
overall development in all related fields, reform and revitalization, and
international cooperation -- to reach a considerable scale and level, in the
process forming a comprehensive system of research, design, production, and
testing.
Other achievements of the country's space program include: the putting-in-place of space centers capable of launching satellites of various types and manned spacecraft as well as a TT&C (Telemetry Tracking and Command) network consisting of ground stations across the country and tracking and telemetry ships; the establishment of a number of satellite application systems, which have yielded remarkable social and economic benefits; the setting-up of a space science research system of a fairly high level has been set up, with many innovative achievements having been made; and the emergence of a contingent of qualified space scientists and technicians.
China's space industry was developed on the basis of weak infrastructure industries and a relatively backward scientific and technological level, under special national and historical conditions. In the process of carrying out space activities independently, China has opened a road of development unique to its national situation, scoring a series of important achievements with relatively small input and within a relatively short span of time.
Now, China ranks among the most advanced countries in the world in many
important technological fields, such as satellite recovery, single-rocket
multi-satellite launch, cryogenic-fueled rockets, strap-on rockets,
geo-stationary satellite launch, and TT&C. Significant achievements have
also been gained in the development and application of remote-sensing satellites
and telecommunications satellites, and in manned spacecraft testing and space
micro-gravity experiments.