China to lend moon rocks to NASA-funded U.S. universities

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: China Lend Moon Rocks Nasa Funded Us Universities Rcna202945 - World News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

The announcement highlights how U.S.-China cooperation in some areas like space has not completely ended, despite tensions between the two countries over geopolitics and tariffs.
China Displays Lunar Samples From Moon Mission
Lunar rocks on display at the National Museum of China in Beijing in 2021.Kevin Frayer / Getty Images file

SHANGHAI — China’s national space agency said Thursday that it would let scientists from the U.S. and allied countries analyze rocks it retrieved from the moon, Beijing’s latest move to increase the international influence of its lunar exploration program.

The announcement highlights how U.S.-China cooperation in some areas like space has not completely ended, despite tensions between the two countries over geopolitics and tariffs.

Two U.S. universities that receive NASA funding, Brown University and the State University of New York at Stony Brook, are among the seven institutions that have been allowed to borrow lunar samples China retrieved from the moon in 2020.

The remaining authorized institutions are from Japan, France, Germany, Britain and Pakistan.

With its uncrewed Chang’e-5 mission in 2020 China became only the third country to collect rocks from the lunar surface, joining the Soviet Union and the United States, which last went to the moon and retrieved samples in 1972.

China’s subsequent uncrewed Chang’e-6 mission, completed in June last year, made it the first country to bring back rocks from the side of the moon facing away from Earth.

U.S.-China cooperation on space has long been deterred by a 2011 U.S. law that seeks to ensure American technologies stay out of the hands of China’s military. Under the law, NASA must work with the FBI to certify to Congress that any such talks with China would not threaten U.S. national security.

NASA head Bill Nelson told Reuters in October that NASA and the China National Space Administration (CNSA) were discussing the terms of Beijing’s loan agreement for the Chang’e-5 moon rocks after he assured American lawmakers that the talks would not pose national security concerns.

Four U.S. universities had applied for access to the Chang’e-5 samples, Nelson said then, adding that he thought the talks would end with China agreeing to provide access to samples.

However, he said he expected NASA to have to work with the FBI for another national security certification to enable any moon rock deliveries to U.S. universities for research.

Beijing hopes to use its space prowess to forge closer political ties with close partners and U.S. allies alike.

“It seems the United States is quite closed off now despite being open in the past, while we were closed off in the past and are now open; this is because of the increase in our nation’s overall strength and consequent rise in self-confidence,” Wu Weiren, chief designer of China’s lunar exploration program, told Reuters in an interview Wednesday, adding that growing U.S. “isolationism” would not help its space ambitions.

A CNSA official said Wednesday that the Chang’e-4 and 6 missions had four international payloads, while the Chang’e-7 mission next year will have six international payloads and “cooperation with 10 countries” is being discussed for the subsequent Chang’e-8 mission.

China hopes Chang’e-7 and 8 can help provide the information it needs to decide where and how to build a permanent manned lunar base by 2035.

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