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China’s next-gen astronaut capsule for moon missions aces crucial pad-abort test (video)

China is advancing the development of the technology it needs to try to beat NASA back to the moon.

The China Manned Space Engineering Office (CMSEO) completed a pad abort test of its Mengzhou spacecraft today (June 17), marking another step forward in its efforts to send Chinese astronauts, or taikonauts, to the lunar surface for the first time. The zero-altitude escape sequence was initiated at 12:30 p.m. Beijing time (12:30 a.m. EDT; 0430 GMT), from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in northwest China.

With just the Mengzhou spacecraft on the pad (no rocket), the solid rocket escape engines on the capsule’s abort tower fired for approximately 20 seconds, according to CMSEO. At altitude, Mengzhou’s escape tower was jettisoned, and a trio of parachutes guided the spacecraft safely back to the desert surface, touching down with an airbag cushion at 12:32 p.m. BJT (12:32 a.m. EDT; 0432 GMT). CMSEO called the test “a complete success.”

China’s Mengzhou spacecraft returns to Earth during a pad-abort test on June 17, 2025. (Image credit: CMSEO)

Tests like this allow spacecraft engineers to verify safety systems of new spacecraft without putting crews’ lives on the line. In the event of an in-flight emergency during an actual launch, Mengzhou’s capsule escape tower is designed to propel the spacecraft away from the rocket in order to put a safe distance between the crew and potential disaster.

The capability has been built into nearly every spacecraft designed to transport crews since the beginning of spaceflight. NASA’s Orion spacecraft, responsible for ferrying astronauts to the moon as a part of the U.S. space agency’s Artemis program, underwent a similar test in 2019.

Artist’s illustration of astronauts on the moon planting a Chinese flag. (Image credit: 3DSculptori/Stock/Getty Images)

While China is slightly behind in its progress, the nation’s efforts to beat the U.S. back to the moon may be gaining momentum just as NASA’s own plans for a lunar return run into a speed bump.

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