China's Kuaizhou-11 rocket scheduled to launch in first half of 2018

WUHAN - China's Kuaizhou-11 solid-fuelled carrier rocket is scheduled to launch for the first time, in the first half of 2018, according to the rocket's developer and producer China Aerospace Science and Industry Corp (CASIC).
The preparation work for the launch has been completed, and the rocket will send six satellites into space in its first mission, said Zhang Di, an official with CASIC.
Kuaizhou, which is Chinese for fast ship, is a low-cost solid-fuelled carrier rocket with high reliability and a short preparation period.
The launch cost of the Kuaizhou rockets has been reduced to $5,000 per kg of payload, which is considerably lower than its international competitors, according to Zhang.
With a lift-off mass of 78 tonnes, the rocket was designed to launch low-Earth and Sun-synchronous orbit satellites.
In January, the Kuaizhou-1A rocket sent three satellites into space in its first commercial mission.
- China, Indonesia sign MOU on copyright cooperation
- Drones take Xinjiang's cotton farming automation to new heights
- Five missing after landslide hit Sichuan
- Four job fairs to offer 61,000 openings in healthcare, internet, e-commerce and AI
- China activates emergency response to flooding in Guangdong
- China sees marked improvement in ecological quality of grasslands