HomeWorldWhy China is falling behind SpaceX in the race for space internet dominance

Why China is falling behind SpaceX in the race for space internet dominance

With fewer than 1% of planned satellites launched and no reusable rocket, Chinese megaconstellations are struggling to catch up to Elon Musk’s Starlink. Here’s what’s slowing them down—and why it still matters.

July 25, 2025 / 13:23 IST
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SpaceX
SpaceX

China has ambitious plans to rival Starlink with two massive low Earth orbit satellite networks—Qianfan and Guowang—promising global internet access and national security gains. But data shows that as of now, these projects are far off track. Of the nearly 27,000 satellites planned, fewer than 125 have been launched, and technical setbacks continue to hamper progress. Meanwhile, SpaceX already has around 8,000 Starlink satellites in orbit and launches more every month, the New York Times reported.

China’s satellite gap: What the numbers reveal

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The Qianfan network, operated by Shanghai Spacesail Technologies, was supposed to launch 650 satellites by the end of 2025. So far, only 90 have reached space, and 13 of those appear to have failed to reach the proper orbit. The Guowang network is even further behind, with only 34 satellites launched of a planned 13,000. In contrast, SpaceX’s Starlink is expanding rapidly with a reusable launch system that has completed nearly 500 missions.

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