First 'seed satellite' set to blast off (China Daily) Updated: 2006-07-24 05:53
The planting of space tomatoes and green peppers in Southwest China's Sichuan
Province, which started in 1999, has raised average yield by 10 to 20 per cent,
with the fruits bigger and of better quality, according to earlier newspaper
reports.
The Shijian-8 recoverable satellite will blast off aboard a Long March 2C
rocket from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Centre in Northwest China's Gansu
Province.
China is only the third nation capable of recovering satellites and has
launched 22 recoverable satellites with one failure.
A conference was held on Saturday in Beijing by the Commission of Science,
Technology and Industry for National Defence to mark the accomplishment of the
building of the breeding satellite.
The commission presides over the whole Shijian-8 project, while the Ministry
of Agriculture is in charge of the breeding of plant seeds and the China
Aerospace Science and Technology Corp (CAST) is responsible for designing and
building the satellite, and studying the space environment for breeding.
Zhang Qingwei, president of the CAST, told China Daily earlier that China is
scheduled to send nine satellites into orbit this year.
In addition to the space-breeding satellite, the country
will put into space a meteorological satellite, an oceanic satellite, and
SinoSat 2, which is a direct broadcasting satellite capable of beaming TV
programmes to even the most remote rural regions in the
country.
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