The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Can China Beat the U.S. Back to the Moon?
Episode Date: October 21, 2025In this episode of China Decode, Alice Han and James Kynge break down Beijing’s new export restrictions on rare earth minerals and what they mean for global supply chains, a British spy scandal rat...tling UK–China relations, and the growing space race that could determine who gets back to the moon first. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I know that conventional wisdom is saying, yep, this is all a process, they'll get to a deal
eventually, but this time, the emotions are really high. I just don't know which way it's going
to fall. You might have a better sense than me. Well, I've long thought that they would rather
play kabuki than have anything substantive on paper. Structurally, there are too many difficult
issues and tractable issues at play for them to be resolved as early as this year or even early
next year. So I would be in the same camp as you.
Welcome to China Decode. I'm Alice Han.
And I'm James King.
In today's episode of China Decode, we're discussing how Trump's trade war with Beijing
threatens the global economy, the spy scandal that rocked Great Britain raising major
questions about UK-China relations, and experts in the U.S. see China's capabilities
in the space sector quickly catching up to their.
But who will make it back to the moon first?
All right, James, we've got a lot to get into, but first let me ask, how has the last week been for you?
Oh, never a dull week in U.S.-China relations, Salas.
I mean, really, it's just keeping us on the treadmill, I can say that.
How about you?
Well, I thought I could take a little bit of a break before the APEC summit and potential
Trump-She meeting, but it seems that we've transitioned yet again from Dayton to Brinkman's ship,
And now, you know, everyone is laser-focused on whether or not there will be a meeting and whether or not there will be a deal.
So no rest for the wicked, it seems.
All right, well, let's get into it.
Last week, many observers described the escalations in the U.S.-China trade war as existential.
And certainly, James, I'm sure that you have felt this way.
We've been exceptionally busy, I would say, in the last week, We China Watchers.
We've seen potentially massive implications not just for these two countries.
but for the global economy. We've got things like export controls, rare earth metal
restrictions, chip embargoes, and ship docking fees. Now, these can seem exceptionally bureaucratic
and complicated, and frankly, a little bit hard to wrap your head around. So we're here to
try to separate fact from fiction and make it a bit more straightforward, even though I think
it is still quite a complicated issue. It seems that the fate of the world's economy might
depend on whether or not they can cut a deal. But I won't be too dramatic and I'll get right into
the meat of things. James, you know, firstly, I want to start off with export controls because I think
a lot of people are somewhat confused about what export controls are, how China and the US have
deployed them, what the actual implementation process looks like. Certainly what struck me when I
looked at the recent bout of export controls was the fact that China has gone further than it did
in previous years, in which it was a simple, to some extent, licensure regime,
Mofcom, the Ministry of Commerce, would basically enforce rules for exporters of rare earths
to acquire a license effectively to export out of China.
Now it seems like China has cast a longer shadow
and is basically mandating not just domestic companies,
but also foreign companies that use as little as 0.1% of their total goods
from rare earths coming from China to have to apply to.
these licenses as well. That seems to me, when I think about it from a bureaucratic perspective,
exceptionally difficult to realize. And even when I think about in previous years when China put
these license regimes in place, these things took time. In fact, you had issues in Trump
1.0 when licenses weren't delivered on time. Supply was somewhat limited. It affected the market.
I find it very hard to believe that Moffcom is going to sit there and physically go through every good
line by line that has as little as 0.1% total goods from Chinese rare earths. What's your take
on this, James? Well, as you said, Alice, everyone's talking about this fight between the US and China
in very, very stark terms. You use the word existential. Before I get to the details, and let's do
a little bit of an explainer of what these export controls really boiled down to. But before I get
to that, let's have a little taste of the invective that's reached new heights in recent days,
going back and forth between the US and China. In the words of Gideon Rackman in the Financial Times,
it's like a couple of heavyweight boxers trash-talking each other before a fight. But I think
the real question is, is this actually going to come to blows? Or are the two heavyweight
boxers going to patch things up, patch up their differences before the fight occurs? And we just don't
know at this stage what's going to happen in that regard. But anyway, in terms of
In terms of the rhetorical punch-up, Scott Bessent, the U.S. Treasury Secretary, said that when it comes to trade, quote, this is China versus the world.
He said that if Beijing does not withdraw its threat to restrict exports of these rare earth minerals, then the world will have to decouple from China.
You really can't get much starker than that.
Beijing, though, it hit back.
it said that the Trump administration's threat to impose 100% tariffs on China were, quote,
a typical example of US double standards. And just to add to the whole mood, the Chinese
foreign ministry put out a video showing Chairman Mao Zedong during the Korean War that was in
the 1950s, proclaiming no matter how long this war will last, we will never yield. So you can
can see on both sides in the U.S. and in China, emotions are running really high. Yeah.
I must say, I've been covering China for more than 35 years. I've never seen anything like this.
This really is emotional. But maybe I could give a little bit of a recap, Alice, on, you know,
the nuts and bolts of where we are on export controls and what they mean.
That would be great. Honestly, I think almost everyone needs this primer, so fire away, James.
Okay. So on October the 9th, China's...
Ministry of Commerce came out with a slew of new regulations on these rare earth exports.
Now, these rare earths have long names that, you know, normally we wouldn't know.
But basically, they're crucial minerals that are used in making everything from smartphones
to electric vehicles and also, and this is key, to many different weapons, such as submarine
engines, radar systems, missile guidance systems, even the F-35 U.S. fighter jet.
So basically what China said is that if you're a foreign company and you want to export products
that are made with, as you mentioned, Alice, even a trace of these rare earths that are sourced
from China, then you need to apply and get a license from China.
And of course, this is crucial because China processes.
about 90% of the rare earths that are used in the world.
So almost everything, almost all of the high-tech technologies
that use these critical minerals are therefore subject to licensing from China.
They added something else onto that,
which is that any equipment that you might buy from China
in order to process your own rare earths also has to be licensed from China.
So it really gives China a stranglehold over this crucial
aspect of global trade. And it means that if China wanted to, and I'm not saying it will,
but if it wanted to, it could simply stop huge chunks of global trade, huge numbers of high-tech
goods from being imported and exported. So I think that's the really crucial background to this.
How do you see it all panning out from here? Well, I come back to this conclusion that China
kind of bungled this announcement. And the reason I think about it in this way is that I think
Bessent was canny to make it a China versus the rest of the world argument. We've seen, I think,
more moves amongst the G7 countries, I would say in particular Europe and Japan, to really
start to go beyond the rhetoric of getting the act together. I think that in the coming months,
there may be more movements to try to get more of a collaborative set of projects on the ground
for alternative supply chains of critical minerals. And I think that China's, again, the long shadow
that it's cast by borrowing America's foreign direct product rule of, you know, de minimis
or percentage of a component from Chinese critical minerals, that framework or that approach,
I think, has really discombobulated and disconcerted a lot of the G7 countries. Because it effectively
gives China the optionality at any given point in time to say, well, look, Brussels, we don't
like your policy on X. So we're going to stop the sale or exports of certain types of critical
minerals or certain types of goods that have a component of critical minerals from China.
That, I think, at a strategic level, is deeply worrying. I sense that China is trying to backpedal
a little bit on this issue because it didn't realize how big a deal it was for a lot of these
G7 countries. But I think the cat is out of the bag already. And it reminds me somewhat of what
happened in 2010, if you recall, with the Japan-China, Sinkaku, Jiao Yutai spat over the islands,
in which China then launched a two-month full embargo of rare earth on Japan. I think a trigger
has been set in place to get the G7 countries, I think, to take a more concerted effort towards
supply chain resilience. What I would add to what you're saying, James, is the fact that
that America can't do it alone. America is so behind. MP Materials is the only company that
has mines of rare earths that's actually active in California. And Novion is the only American
company in tangent with Linus, an Australian mining company that can potentially produce
performance magnets. Performance magnets, as you rightly say, James, that are used in military equipment,
in defense equipment, as well as wind turbines, batteries, and EVs. So I sense that China has this
window of opportunity, call it three, four, five years to have this choke point, or rather
chokehold on America. But when you broaden out beyond that five-year horizon, the technology
itself isn't difficult. It's not expensive. It's just extremely pollutive. And it requires, I think,
in the U.S. case, private public partnerships, which, again, we can debate whether or not that is
possible, given the climate. But certainly, if the G7 banded together, I think that they could produce
to potential alternative supply chain.
But certainly in this narrow amount of time,
call it three years,
I think China has maximum pressure
on the rare earth's issue.
That's how I think about it more broadly.
Yeah, absolutely.
I very much agree with that.
At least three years, I think.
I must say, though,
I do think it's really interesting
that there has been a stock price rally
in a lot of these companies
that produce rare earths outside China.
You mentioned one there,
M.P. Materials.
But we've also seen the share price
of USA Rare Earth
and Australia's Linus, that's an Australian company,
that are more than doubled this year.
And we're starting to see as well the US state itself
taking stakes in some of these rare earth companies
like lithium America's trilogy metals,
which are two Canadian miners,
in attempts to bolster their financial firepower.
So it certainly seems to be the case
that we're beginning to make out the contours
of the US government being really galvanized by this issue
and really putting some money into it
and investors starting to follow that lead thinking,
wow, there's going to be such a shortage of rare us
that are produced outside China.
This has got to be an opportunity for the investors.
And just to also chime with your comment
about the G7 getting galvanized,
I noticed that there is similar disquiet about rare earths
within the European Union.
and there was a statement by the Aerospace Security and Defense Industries Association of Europe.
Apologies for the long name, but it's a big organization that represents about 4,000 companies,
mostly in sort of aerospace and military, and they've put out a statement saying they're keeping a watchful eye on new Chinese measures.
That's kind of diplomatic language for, we're really scared about this, we're really anxious about.
this. And so I would say the impetus in Europe for doing something, perhaps with America,
perhaps going it alone, is fairly strong as well. But as you say, Alice, that will be in the long
term. We're talking several years. And in the meantime, minimum three years, China has the whip hand.
And China therefore can use this leverage in its negotiations with America. And that's exactly
what's happening right now. So we're back to the analogy of the Chinese price fighter, trash
talking, the American price fighter, ahead of what we think will be quite bruising negotiations
between the US and China to reach some kind of a deal. Frankly, I don't know if they will reach a
deal. I still remain skeptical. I know that conventional wisdom is saying, yep, this is all a
process, they'll get to a deal eventually. But this time, the emotions are really high.
I just don't know which way it's going to fall.
You might have a better sense than me.
Well, I've a long thought that they would rather play kabuki than have anything substantive on paper.
Structurally, there are too many difficult issues and tractable issues at play for them to be resolved as early as this year or even early next year.
So I would be in the same camp as you.
And just to tack on to what you said, I was in Rome over the weekend, talked to a civil servant in Roman politics.
and they intimated to me that before these export controls that China launched,
there was a feeling that Europe could hedge between U.S. and China
and maybe marginally move more in the China direction.
But certainly that export control announcement has, I think, pushed Europe to reconsider that strategy.
And in fact, I think that that might end up being China's Achilles heel.
And in fact, it may have shot itself in the foot by doing this.
Two sort of quick factoids that I'll put out there so that listeners can get a sense
of just the enormity of China's advantage in the space is China has 50% of the world's
reserves naturally in its own borders, more than any other country.
It mines 70% of the world's rare earths and is responsible for 90% of the processing,
as you say James, and the US is 13% of the world's rare earth reserves.
And most mining activity is stopped since the early 2000s.
So you get a sense of how far back the US has been because of what happened over 20 years
go. That's something to bear in mind. Okay, James, we'll be back with more after a quick break,
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Welcome back. In April of last,
year, the UK government charged two men with gathering and providing information to China.
Spying, in other words.
Christopher Cash, a former parliamentary researcher and Christopher Berry, a teacher and consultant,
were alleged to have passed intelligence to a senior member of the Chinese Communist Party
on over 30 occasions from December 2021 to February 23.
Now, this case was set to go to trial until abruptly last month.
all the charges were subsequently dropped.
Prosecutors said that the government had failed to provide sufficient evidence that China
posed a national security threat.
Facing pressure to explain what happened last week, the UK Prime Minister Kiyos Dama publicly
released three witness statements from the case, each written by Deputy National Security
Advisor Matthew Collins, and they contained some, I would say, pretty sensational details
with far-ranging consequences for the future of not just UK politicians,
but UK-China relations. James, I have to ask you, I'm so curious, I've been reading up about
this last few weeks, as a Brit, how significant is this case? Certainly espionage wasn't born
overnight. We've had a long history of espionage, but this seems to have really gripped the
national and international imagination. Can you walk us through some of the details? How did we get to
this stage where we've got these two Christophers who are implicated in this national security fiasca?
Yeah, absolutely, Alice. I mean, you know, just stepping back from the details of the case for a minute, you're so right. The media has been in a frenzy over this in the UK. I mean, maybe it's something to do with the UK national psyche. We all love John LaCarray. We love spy novels. I love John LeCarray. Many of us live through the tail end of the Cold War. You know, we remember the spy exchanges across the misty bridges in Berlin at the height of the Cold War. So this really gets the national interest ticking away.
But just to come back to the case itself, I think that the reason why this spy case in the UK is important is because it's much more than a spy case.
It shows how countries, in this case the UK, but possibly in the future, many more countries in the West, have to manage the conflict between their security interests and their economic interests.
obviously China is a major security player these days. I'll be talking a little bit more about
things like cyber hacking, cyber spying. China's clearly a big security challenge for all countries
in the West, but of course, at the same time, it's a massive market for many of the biggest
companies that we have. So that's the fundamental dividing line that I think this case helps
to illuminate. As you said, Alice, the case against the
two men accused of spying for China was dropped last month. And the director of public prosecution
said that the British government had failed to provide sufficient evidence that China was,
quote, a threat to national security. It has to be said, both of the two men accused of
spying have consistently denied any allegations of wrongdoing. That needs to be very clear.
But then what happened, which really created a flurry of control.
proversy was that the government released three witness statements from Matthew Collins' deputy
national security adviser. And in each of these statements, it's clear that Collins says
that China is a threat to national security. Just to give you the detail on that, in the first
statement, he says, the Chinese state poses, quote, a threat to our people, prosperity and
security. In the second statement, he describes various ways in which the government believes
it's been hacked, cyberhacked, of course, by Chinese state actors. And in the third statement,
he talks of, quote, active espionage threats posed by China to the UK. So which is it? Is it, you know,
as the government said throughout this case, that you couldn't provide sufficient evidence that
China is a threat to national security, or is it, as Matthew Collins suggested in his three
statements, that China is indeed a threat to national security? I'm not saying that one of these
precludes the other. The important thing to mention here is that the case was never tried.
So we don't know if countervailing evidence would have come out in the case that would have
weakened the assertion of the British state that indeed China is a threat to national
security. We just don't know that because the case was never tried. But there is, it seems to
me, an objective discrepancy between what Matthew Collins says and what the British government
ruled. So that's the basic contradiction that we're dealing with here. Now, added to all of this
is the sense, certainly among some politicians, that the reason the British government threw
the case out was nothing to do with the merits of the case itself. It was,
was actually political. And in this regard, we've got the conservative leader, Kemi Badenoch,
saying that the events, i.e., the events around the case, leave, and I should be careful about
what I'm quoting here, quote, a strong impression that your government, i.e., the current
labor government in the UK, a strong impression that your government undermined Britain's
national security because you are too weak to do anything other.
than appease China. So you can see from Kemi Badenox's statement there, she's saying effectively
that this was a political decision. You know, honestly, we have no clue because we don't know
all of the ins and outs of the case that was never tried. But it is certainly, as you said at the
beginning, Alice, this is certainly creating a storm of controversy here and raising all kinds of
questions about the UK's relations with China. I mean, the irony I was thinking is.
as you were talking, James, is that this really happened during the conservative government.
I mean, one of the Christophers, I believe it was Christopher Cash, who was the parliamentary researcher.
He was working for Tom Tuggenhat, a back venture in the conservative government at the time.
So for Kemi Badenog to come out and say this, I think might be a little bit hypocritical,
or strike one as being ironic, given that even before the Labor government,
the conservative government, say, under Cameron, was trying to pave the way for a golden relationship,
relationship with China. That's something that struck me as you were talking. But it sort of
begs the broader question, which is the UK, I think, has oftentimes treated China from a more
commercial point of view rather than an ideological point of view. I think it differs from the U.S.,
again, primarily for strategic reasons, because China's not considered a strategic rival in the same
way that it is by the U.S. But certainly I think the U.K. feels as though there are a lot of commercial
stakes at play, which potentially is driving this, you know, arguably more doveish position on
China. I was hearing from some people in the national security community that there are
concerns about Chinese malware being added to electronics and goods that are then delivered
and shipped to the UK. What's your sense of this broader strategic and espionage challenge
that China poses for the UK? Because it doesn't seem to have the same restrictions on Chinese
goods and technologies that say Washington has.
Yeah, absolutely. I mean, this is the big background to the whole case. And I was just doing some
research. There is a fascinating new report out by the UK National Cyber Security Center this month
that shows a big increase in cyber attacks on the UK. And many of these cyber attacks, of course,
are trying to get sensitive information, whether it be corporate sensitive information or government
sensitive information. And the report found that 74% of UK IT leaders, these are people that were
canvassed by the report, identified China as a top concern. In other words, a top concern behind
the cyber attacks. And that was a bigger percentage than was applied to any other country.
So in other words, China is seen by the UK's leading IT professionals.
as the biggest concern in terms of a country when it comes to cyber attacks.
Now, 18 of the cyber attacks mentioned in this report significantly impacted essential services
in the UK or the wider economy.
So these are regarded as really big, significant cyber attacks.
And the report also says that a, quote, serious incident of cyber hacking or cyber attacking
is now occurring at a rate of nearly one every two days in the UK.
So, you know, if you ask me about this sort of trade-off between economic interests,
many of our biggest companies sell lots of products and goods in China,
many of them invest in the Chinese economy,
and they need good relations with China.
But on the other side of the ledger,
we've got this really worsening security situation
that makes China look like the perpetrator, as you mentioned,
of espionage and also of cyber hacking, cyber attacking on, you know, really important government
and corporate entities. So it's a tough one. If you force me to make a judgment, I think that
the security concerns will gradually eclipse the economic benefits. And I think the orientation
of policy will turn gradually more cautious towards China. Yeah. You arguably have seen the same thing
with immigration, where reform has moved the Overton window towards the Labor Party having a more
hawkish position on immigration. And I think I would agree with you, James. And again, to put it into
the context of our first segment, which was about China shooting itself in the foot over rare earths,
I sense that China's peak geopolitical power was probably just after the summer. I sense the tides
are shifting because, to your point, we're hearing more stories about cybersecurity risks in the U.S., posed
by China and in the UK as well.
So I sense that there is somewhat of a shift.
But one last thing that I'll add is that China is planning a super embassy, so to speak,
in London, but this may be at risk.
Apparently this proposed facility would stretch across 20,000 square meters, and it would
be the largest embassy in all of Europe.
So apparently the proposal of the future of this project has been delayed until December 10th.
It may be delayed beyond that, but that's certainly something to keep in mind.
All right, so let's take a quick break.
Stay with us.
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Well, welcome back. James, this has to be my favorite segment for today,
and that is whether or not China can get to the moon. China's advancements in science and
technology aren't just in artificial intelligence, they're making huge strides into outer space,
with many observers noting that China may have the resources to beat America back to the moon.
In the US, NASA, along with Elon Musk's SpaceX, as a partner, announced the Artemis 3 mission
just a couple of years ago, which is planned for 2027. But some high-profile launch failures have
raised concerns that SpaceX might be behind schedule, and the budget cuts and ongoing government
shut down have hollowed out NASA. The White House, I was looking at this the other day,
proposed a 24% cut to NASA's budget in 2026, bringing the budget to the lowest level seen
since 1961. And that was before they landed a man on the moon. Meanwhile, China successfully
completed their mission on the far side of the moon last year, which was the first of its kind.
And Beijing has said that they want to land humans on the moon by 2030. I find this fascinating
because as a kid, I've always loved space.
But I also think this is fascinating for two reasons, James.
One is in the context of great power rivalry.
And the other one is the way in which a lot of these space technologies have dual-use implications.
What struck me when I was researching this was the similarities between the Soviet and U.S. relationship during the early part of the Cold War.
It was really Sputnik, the Soviet's launching of the first satellite into space in 57 that promised
the creation of NASA by Eisenhower a year later in 1958.
And it was subsequently the Soviets who got Yuri Gagarin and a dog into space
that prompted Kennedy's famous speech, we choose to go to the moon.
The U.S., in some respects, was propelled by the Soviets to race to the moon and to race to space.
And as soon as the Soviet Union collapsed, it was almost as if NASA
and the whole project to go to the moon collapsed as well.
But I think the dynamic is shifting again now with China really wanting to get what it calls
Taekanauts, so to borrow a Chinese term, its version of astronauts into space.
That project, I think, is propelling the Trump administration to launch Project Artemis,
which is to get American men and women back onto the moon.
I think this is really, really interesting case study of how great power rivalry pushes people
along the technological frontier and a great story for how conflict.
really breeds technological innovation, whether you look at shipbuilding through the 17th, 18th century,
you look at the nuclear bomb in the middle of the 20th century, and fast forward to now, you look
at the space race and all the attendant technologies. Part of this is going to be a satellite
discussion, and I'm curious to hear what your thoughts are on this, James, where China has
roughly about 900 satellites in orbit, and it's overtaken the UK as this country with the second-most
satellites. But it's still quite a bit behind the U.S. I mean, the U.S. is 9,000 satellites in orbit.
And I was calculating it spends about 10 times more than the Chinese on the space sector, although
China is exponentially growing it. So it remains to be seen how this all pans out in this greater
space race. But again, I'm very curious what you have to say on this, James, and whether or not
you're a fan of space. Yeah, I'm a big fan of space. Just like Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader,
coming up with some quotes that he's had on space recently. But as I see it, this race back
to the moon, because, of course, the US put a man on the moon in 1972, and China has yet to put
a man on the moon or a woman on the moon, is really focusing people's attention. The Chinese
have said, as you pointed out, Alice, that they want to put a person on the moon before 2030. So that
seems way beyond the current schedule for the SpaceX system, which is called Starship Human Landing
System, which is scheduled for 2027. But as you alluded to, there is a sense that the SpaceX program
could be delayed. There seems to be some issues. And of course, the SpaceX Lunar Lander needs to
be built. So we really don't know who is ahead at the moment. By the way, in August this year,
China successfully tested its own lunar lander, not in space, but on dry land in a northern Chinese
province. And everything seemed to work fine. The ascend systems, the descent systems,
it all seemed to go well, according to reports. And this lunar lander, which is called Langue,
which means embrace the moon in Chinese,
is going to serve as a living space,
a power source, and a data center
after it lands on the moon.
So it's quite an ambitious project in itself.
And this brings me to Xi Jinping
and what the nature of China's true lunar ambitions really are.
First of all, Xi Jinping is what we would call a big space nut.
I mean, he talks boldly about going into space,
using celestial bodies for human advancement.
He talks about intraplanetary exploration.
He really loves the whole topic.
And last year, he went into rhetorical raptures
when, as you said, this China lunar module
picked up samples from the dark side of the moon
for the first time ever.
But to me, it raises questions
as to what China's end game is.
You know, what are its lunar ambitions?
Is it just wanting to pull?
somebody onto the moon and gain the propaganda success that that will bring, or is it going
after what's on the moon? Resources, maybe even some of the rare earths that we were talking about
at the top of the program. Maybe China wants to claim parts of the moon. I think these questions
are sort of lurking out somewhere in mid-orbit, and they may become a lot more germane as
China goes forward. But in general, as you said, Alice, the US is still quite a long way ahead
when it comes to space in just about every metric. You mentioned the satellites. The US has got
many more successful orbital launches than China. And the US has been spending much more than
China over many years. So the US is ahead. But this effort by China to put somebody on the moon
before 2030, really, I think, focuses the attentions on what China's really planning for space
and what it's going to do when it gets there, when it gets to the move.
I mean, I think about this in relation to how China conceives of great power politics.
It wants to have a seat at the table, whether it's in the Arctic or whether it's in the
multilateral institutions.
I think it's China saying, look, we want to be front and center more than we have ever been
and actually have a stake. I thought it was quite interesting that in 2024, so last June,
China planted a national flag made from basalt fiber on the far side of the moon, and apparently
this is indestructible. And the whole point is that Americans can see this, well, the rest of the
world can see this without it being ever destroyed. I thought that was an interesting visual
depiction of China's ambitions. But the other two ways that I think about this issue at play,
Number one is China is not privy to the research sharing of the Artemis Accord that the U.S. launched.
So the U.S. shares information with, I would say, largely allied countries when it comes to space-related data.
China instead launched its own rival initiative called the International Lunar Research Station Initiative with Russia and a host of other countries.
I would say largely small global South countries like Senegal and Venezuela and Nicaragua.
But that, again, shows you how China really does want to have a sense.
seat at the table. The second thing that I would say is the way that I think about this is kind of
like the race to the vaccine back in COVID, is that the U.S. benefited from this strong relationship
between a very innovative private sector, in the case of the vaccines in Moderna, the MRI technology,
and the military industrial complex led by the government. So Operation Warp Speed really made America
the frontrunner in the vaccine race. And I think a similar dynamic is at play when we think about
SpaceX, Elon Musk's SpaceX relationship with the U.S. government.
I mean, it's baffling to me, James, that I wonder what Kennedy would actually think if you
were to come to the present day and realize that actually most of the satellites and most of
the successful launches are made by a private company owned by Elon Musk, a South African.
So, you know, SpaceX conducts 52% of all global orbital launches, and it controls more than 7,600
satellites. That's 65% of all active satellites in orbit. And Musk has made it very clear that
he wants Starlink to be the de facto broadband backbone of space. So I think, again, we've got
this Rockefeller-like figure who's playing a decisive role and may ultimately put the US ahead. That's my
hot take. That's a very good point. It's a private company led by a South African,
are contracted by the US Space Agency NASA. And this is so different for
the Chinese effort, which is obviously state-led, state-funded, state-controlled.
It's basically the Chinese state that's going to space.
Exactly. So, yeah, two very different models at play in this space race.
All right, James, last week we did skip this. So now it's time for prediction time.
Each week, James and I are going to put forward one prediction about something China-related.
So why don't you go first, and then I'll share mine.
Okay, Alice. I think, you know, we've got some big Chinese meetings
coming up. We've got the fourth plenum, which I won't go into. Just suffice it to say, it's a big
communist party meeting. I think the most important technology aspect of the Chinese plenum this month
will be artificial intelligence. And I think it will also be the most important technology aspect
of the five-year plan, which will be announced next spring, and which will follow the plenum.
The reason why I think this is important is because China's got a different approach to AI from the United States.
In the U.S., a lot of the energies with regard to artificial intelligence are about a moonshot towards what's called artificial general intelligence, AGI, which is supposed to be the time when machines can basically teach themselves.
But China's approach, as will be seen in this plenum and subsequently in the five-year plan,
published next spring, is to use AI as applications to drive just about every other form of human
endeavour. And so I think that there will be a plan explicitly, which will say that AI needs to be
incorporated in 90% of the equipment and applications by 2030 in six broad sectors. And these are
science and technology, industrial development, consumption, people's well-being, governance capability
and global cooperation. So the point I'm trying to make is that China wants to use AI to power
technologies and to make money, and that's its main concern. Of course, it's also going for
artificial general intelligence, just like the US is, but on the way there, it's trying to
make money from AI and use AI, harness AI.
to power, basically the whole country. So it couldn't be more important. I think that this
plenum and the subsequent five-year plan will be seen as historic with regard to how much it
pushed artificial intelligence. Yeah, I would agree with that. And I think a lot of the focus will
be on some of these chokepoint industries where China may relatively be somewhat vulnerable
chips, for instance, some aspects of biotech and aviation equipment. And to your point, James, I would
agree with you. I think this might be one of the most consequential five-year plans we've seen in
a while. So watch this space. This time next week, we'll give everyone a lowdown of what actually
happened at the five-year plan. All right, so my take is somewhat left field, or rather more
Japanese-shaped. I've been reading a lot about the future potential prime minister of Japan,
who in some circles is known as the Japanese Thatcher, the Iron Lady, she will be the first
female prime minister of Japan, and she will lead a very, I think, hawkish pivot again on China
policy. When you read some of her works, and she's apparently a prolific writer, China is a big
focus in her writings as a strategic rival and adversary. I sense that under her leadership,
we may see more inroads into nuclearization. Japan may ultimately get a nuclear bomb. That may
change the strategic balance on the Korean peninsula, on Taiwan, straight relations, on the
China issue writ large. And secondly, back to the critical minerals point, I think she could
be part of the pivot amongst the G7 to lean in a more hawkish direction, to collaborate more
amongst each other and to decouple further from China. I sense that maybe she and Trump will be
the new Thatcher and Reagan of our times. That's my hot take for the week.
All right, that's all for this episode.
Thank you for listening to China Decode.
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