
China, Russia relaunch joint maritime research missions, eyeing Arctic ambitions
Advertisement
A total of 25 members from the two countries are on board the research ship Akademik M.A. Lavrentyev, which left the port of Vladivostok on Tuesday, according to China's First Institute of Oceanography (FIO) under the Ministry of Natural Resources.
The ninth such expedition for the two countries – and the first since the pandemic – is focused on the effects of a changing climate on deep-sea environments, according to Chinese authorities.
The expedition, jointly launched by FIO and the Pacific Oceanological Institute (POI) at the Far East Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, is expected to last 45 days, during which researchers will conduct environmental surveys in the Bering Sea and the northwestern Pacific Ocean. They will explore the response systems and feedback effects in the region over the last 126,000 years, a period known as the Late Quaternary.
The FIO said on its website that the scientists would investigate source-to-sink sediment processes, which are the cycles of deposit movement from land into water.
The joint mission on the scientific vessel Akademik M.A. Lavrentyev is expected to last 45 days. Photo: Xinhua
'The resumption of China-Russia joint oceanographic surveys shows [a] shared commitment to addressing global climate change and exploring cutting-edge marine science, and marks a new chapter in bilateral marine research cooperation,' said Wang Jun, acting head of the Chinese consulate general in Vladivostok, according to a report by state news agency Xinhua.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
9 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
US Earth imaging satellite fleet is creating ‘low-cost orbital landmines', China team says
A team of Chinese researchers has criticised the world's largest Earth-imaging satellite fleet, describing the shoebox-sized spacecraft as 'low-cost orbital landmines' that threaten the safety of space operations. Using a self-developed tracking platform, software scientists at the Chinese Academy of Sciences analysed the Dove constellation – which has launched hundreds of CubeSats since 2013 to provide daily, medium-resolution imagery of the Earth's surface – according to the team's article posted on Chinese social media on July 21. The Chinese team said the thruster-less satellites operated by San Francisco-based Planet Labs, posed a growing threat to space safety. They found that by early July more than 80 per cent of the 662 Dove satellites had deorbited, raising concerns about uncontrolled re-entry and potential collisions. They also noted that more than 100 Doves listed in public databases, including the US Space Force's tracking website, were assigned 'incorrect or fabricated' identification codes and lacked orbital data. 01:19 SpaceX Starship explodes during routine pre-launch ground test SpaceX Starship explodes during routine pre-launch ground test 'The Dove constellation has reshaped the commercial Earth observation industry with its low-cost, high-frequency observation model,' the researchers wrote. 'However, it may be turning valuable low Earth orbits into a dangerous 'minefield'.'


South China Morning Post
19 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
China says Japan's space defence guidelines ‘threaten security and stability'
Japan unveiled the space defence guidelines in Tokyo on Monday. Its defence ministry cited Chinese and Russian development of military capabilities in space as a reason it was seeking to boost defence in space and cooperation with the United States and other allies. In response, China's foreign ministry on Tuesday said that in space, Japan, the US and other Western countries continued 'expanding military cooperation and used 'defence' as a pretext to develop and deploy space weapons'. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun says defence is being used 'as a pretext to develop and deploy space weapons'. Photo: dpa 'These measures threaten the security and stability of outer space and trigger the concerns of neighbouring countries about a revival of militarism,' foreign ministry spokesman Guo Jiakun said at a regular press conference in Beijing. Japan's guidelines state that China and Russia are actively developing technologies to jam or neutralise other countries' satellites, such as so-called killer satellites, in-orbit rendezvous and proximity operations, and direct ascent anti-satellite missiles. The guidelines say China has significantly increased its network of military satellites in recent years and that it has built constellations for monitoring, tracking and communication with targets. They say those satellites will support long-range precision strikes and rapidly improve the Chinese military's command, control, communication, intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance capabilities. 'To ensure their military superiority, some states, including China and Russia, are actively developing technologies to disrupt and disable other countries' satellites … investing in improving capabilities, turning space into a growing combat domain and increasing threats and risks in outer space,' the guidelines say. It comes as Japan and the US have stepped up cooperation on space-based surveillance and intelligence sharing. That includes the US forces in Japan setting up a space command at its Yokota air base in December.


South China Morning Post
a day ago
- South China Morning Post
Acting Nasa chief to hold talks with Russian counterpart on space issues this week
US Transport Secretary and interim head of Nasa Sean Duffy said on Tuesday he is looking to find common ground with Russia on space issues when he meets his Russian counterpart later this week. Advertisement Russian news agencies reported earlier this week that Duffy is set to hold talks with the head of Russian space agency Roscosmos, Dmitry Bakanov, for the first in-person meeting at the agencies' heads' level since 2018. 'We have wild disagreement with the Russians on Ukraine,' Duffy told reporters after an event on Capitol Hill, while noting that the United States has a partnership with Russia on the International Space Station. 'We're going to continue to build alliances and partnerships and friendships as humanity continues to advance in space exploration.' US President Donald Trump named Duffy as Nasa's interim head earlier this month. Duffy has emphasised that this is a temporary assignment. Advertisement 'We find points of agreement, points of partnership, which is what we have with the International Space Station and the Russians,' Duffy said. 'Through hard times, we don't throw those relationships away.'