China's LandSpace fails to complete reusable rocket test

By Eduardo Baptista and Joey Roulette

BEIJING/WASHINGTON, Dec 3 (Reuters) - The maiden test of LandSpace's next-generation Zhuque-3 rocket ended in failure on Wednesday, dashing the Chinese firm's hopes of becoming the third company after Elon Musk's SpaceX andJeff Bezos' Blue Origin to successfully test a reusable ​spacecraft.

The rocket was not able to complete a controlled landing following an initial launch, state news agency Xinhua reported.

"An abnormal combustion event occurred during ‌the process, preventing a soft landing on the recovery pad," Xinhua said. "The recovery test failed and the specific cause is still under further analysis and investigation."

Zhuque-3's failed landing attempt highlights the difficulty of ‌developing a rocket that can be recovered and reused after being launched into orbit. LandSpace said in a statement that it would use data collected during the flight to optimize its rocket recovery.

China's first domestically developed reusable orbital rocket, if successfully brought to market, would accelerate Beijing's growth in space, allowing for a quicker cadence of missions and lower launch costs as the country pushes to deploy large satellite constellations to rival SpaceX's Starlink.

"As low-orbit constellation deployment accelerates, Zhuque-3 will continue to ... progress from recovery demonstrations to ⁠routine reuse and toward airline-style operational cadence, contributing to ‌China's space-power objectives," LandSpace said.

CHASING SPACEX

SpaceX pioneered commercial rocket reusability about a decade ago with its workhorse Falcon 9, disrupting an established U.S. launch industry that relied primarily on expendable boosters that are discarded in the ocean or remain in space after their ‍mission.

The reusable Falcon 9 core stage allowed SpaceX to start launching its Starlink satellites in 2019 far faster than its rivals, becoming the world's largest operator the following year and disrupting the global satellite communications industry.

In October, Musk praised Zhuque-3's design, saying on X that the Chinese rocket could even beat Falcon 9. LandSpace said on Wednesday that once mature, Zhuque-3 ​can be reused at least 20 times and carry a payload of multiple satellites weighing 18 tonnes.

But the gap is still wide and there is no ‌guarantee that LandSpace will catch up. SpaceX had its first successful Falcon booster landing in 2015 after two failed attempts. Much of the global rocket industry has since gradually sought to mimic the company's reusability model.

Nevertheless, Zhuque-3's maiden flight puts LandSpace ahead of domestic rivals like iSpace, Galactic Energy and Deep Blue Aerospace, which are working on smaller or less mature systems. And it marks the first time that a Chinese firm has come close to a Falcon 9-class reusable vehicle.

A HIGH BARRIER TO ENTRY

Reusable rockets require complex, high-energy manoeuvres and so far, only SpaceX has carried them out routinely. After stage separation, the booster has to turn around in space, ⁠fire its engines to slow down, survive a supersonic fall through hot air and then ​restart its engines just seconds before reaching water or a landing pad.

The engine firings must be ​timed to within thousandths of a second by onboard software that is constantly correcting the rocket's path. Small mistakes in the rocket's angle or engine timing can make the booster spin out of control, miss the landing site or burn up on the way down.

In ‍the face of those complexities, SpaceX is ⁠still the only company to have fully proven reusable rocketry, regularly landing and flying its Falcon 9 boosters again.

More than a decade of landings and dozens of boosters flown up to 20 times have given the company a near-monopoly in reusable orbital launches and the world's highest annual launch rate.

The ⁠gap in experience and data is a major obstacle for would-be rivals.

Firms in China, Europe, India and the U.S. are developing their own reusable rockets, but they lag behind SpaceX's record of ‌flights and its manufacturing scale built up over hundreds of launches, leaving the company dominant in the global market for medium- and heavy-lift ‌missions.

(Reporting by Eduardo Baptista and Joey Roulette; Editing by Sonali Paul and Thomas Derpinghaus)

China's LandSpace fails to complete reusable rocket test

By Eduardo Baptista and Joey Roulette BEIJING/WASHINGTON, Dec 3 (Reuters) - The maiden test of LandSpace's n...
Rivian to recall nearly 35,000 US vehicles over seatbelt issue, says NHTSA

Dec 3 (Reuters) - Rivian Automotive plans to ​recall 34,824 U.S. ‌vehicles due to a ‌damaged seat belt pretension cable that may fail to properly ⁠restrain the ‌driver's seat belt, increasing crash injury ‍risk, the U.S. National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) ​said on Wednesday.

As ‌part of the fix, Rivian has issued an over-the-air software update for certain ⁠2022–2025 EDV models ​and will ​inspect and replace the driver's seat ‍belt ⁠pretension assembly if needed, the regulator added.

(Reporting ⁠by Mihika Sharma in ‌Bengaluru; Editing by ‌Sherry Jacob-Phillips)

Rivian to recall nearly 35,000 US vehicles over seatbelt issue, says NHTSA

Dec 3 (Reuters) - Rivian Automotive plans to ​recall 34,824 U.S. ‌vehicles due to a ‌damaged seat belt pretension cable t...
China likely to chase 5% GDP growth in 2026 in bid to end deflation

BEIJING, Dec 3 (Reuters) - China is likely to stick to its current annual economic growth target of around 5% next year, government advisers and analysts said, a goal that would require authorities to keep fiscal and monetary spigots open as they seek to snap a deflationary spell.

The target would be part of Beijing's efforts ​to start a new five-year plan on a strong footing and shake off the effects of a prolonged property slump, weak consumer demand, excess factory capacity and declines ‌in infrastructure-led investment.

While top leaders have signaled a shift toward supporting household consumption and restructuring the economy over the next five years, such measures may take time to deliver results, putting the immediate focus on fiscal and monetary support.

Most government ‌advisers who spoke to Reuters said they favoured a 2026 growth target of around 5% - the same as this year, with a minority proposing a slightly lower 4.5%-5%. Top leaders are expected to endorse the target at the annual Central Economic Work Conference later this month, where priorities for the coming year will be set.

The growth target will not be announced publicly until the annual parliament meeting in March.

The advisers do not take part in decision-making and spoke on condition of anonymity due to the closed-door nature of the discussions, and their proposals generally reflect the consensus among private economists. Last year, the ⁠agenda-setting meeting was held from December 11 to 12.

"We should set ‌a target of around 5% for 2026, the first year of the 15th five-year plan," said one adviser. "There will be certainly challenges in achieving this, but there is room to maneuver with both fiscal and monetary policy."

Most advisers are calling for the annual budget deficit ratio to remain at 4% or ‍slightly higher. China set a record budget deficit target of around 4% of GDP this year to support its growth goal.

BEIJING TO KEEP FOOT ON STIMULUS PEDAL

Citi analysts expect the central bank, which last cut interest rates in May, to resume policy easing as early as January 2026, with the period following the annual Central Economic Work Conference also seen as a window for a new round of incremental property support.

"For fiscal policies, ​government bond issuance could again be front-loaded in 2026, with a gradual shift towards consumer support and welfare spending," they said in a note.

The government is expected to maintain its ‌consumer goods trade-in subsidies - totaling 300 billion yuan ($42.43 billion) this year - in 2026, amid expectations that some funds could be shifted from goods to services.

China needs average annual growth of 4.17% over the next decade to double per capita GDP to $20,000 from its 2020 level, a milestone that would mark its shift to a "moderately developed country," according to an official study outlining the five-year plan proposals.

Policymakers, mindful of the slowing economy, are expected to set relatively ambitious annual growth targets for the next few years to help preserve policy flexibility later, advisers and economists said.

The new five-year plan, to be unveiled at the parliament meeting, is unlikely to set a specific growth target for 2026–2030, continuing the practice of the previous plan.

CHINA'S ELUSIVE STRUCTURAL SHIFT

The world's second-largest economy is on track ⁠to reach this year's growth target of around 5% - thanks to policy support and resilient exports helped by a ​tariff truce with the United States.

But economic imbalances have worsened this year as factory output outpaces demand, and analysts ​expect deflationary pressures to linger next year, even as the government steps up efforts to curb overcapacity and price wars among firms.

China's economy may crawl out of deflation only in 2027, with the GDP deflator - the broadest measure of prices across goods and services - expected to decline 0.7% in 2026 before rising ‍0.2% in 2027, analysts at Morgan Stanley said.

That would ⁠end four years of deflation.

"While policymakers are gradually moving toward the right direction in economic rebalancing, patience is needed to address supply-demand imbalance," the Morgan Stanley analysts said in a note.

Economists have long urged Beijing to switch to a consumption-led economic model and rely less on debt-fuelled investment and exports for growth.

Chinese leaders pledged to "significantly" increase the share of ⁠household consumption in the economy over the next five years. Household consumption accounts for about 40% of GDP, far below nearly 70% in the United States.

Some government advisers suggest China should aim for a consumption rate of 45% over ‌the next five years.

Achieving this goal would require tough structural reforms to redirect resources from businesses and government to households, including strengthening welfare and easing the internal ‌passport system blamed for urban–rural inequality.

($1 = 7.0700 Chinese yuan)

(Reporting by Reuters staff; Editing by Sam Holmes)

China likely to chase 5% GDP growth in 2026 in bid to end deflation

BEIJING, Dec 3 (Reuters) - China is likely to stick to its current annual economic growth target of around 5% next year, ...
I AM ALS/Youtube Eric Dane is an ambassador for I AM ALS

I AM ALS/Youtube

ActorEric Danehas been brutally honest about the reality that he's facing after having been diagnosed with ALS, since herevealed it in April.

He isn't stopping now.

"I have no reason to be in a good spirit at any time, on any given day," theGrey's Anatomyalum and ambassador for the nonprofit advocacy organizationI AM ALSsaid during a virtual conversation held on Giving Tuesday. "I don't think anybody would blame me if I went upstairs in my bedroom, crawled under the sheets, and spent the next two weeks crying."

Dane, 53, said in June that he had only "one functioning arm," due to his struggle with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which is also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease.Johns Hopkins Medicinedescribes it as a "fatal type of motor neuron disease" that causes "progressive degeneration of nerve cells in the spinal cord and brain." Eventually, symptoms can include paralysis and trouble breathing and swallowing.

Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic Eric Dane married Rebecca Gayheart in 2004

Jason LaVeris/FilmMagic

But Dane makes sure to put in the effort.

"I think it's imperative that I share my journey with as many people as I can because I don't feel like my life is about me anymore," continued Dane, who has a "super complicated" relationship with actress Rebecca Gayheart, whom he married in 2004. "And it's something I've had to wrestle with because I'm a pretty selfish person, and I'd love for my life to be all about me, but I just can't — I don't think I'd be able to move forward if that were the case."

Dane noted that it was "such a big deal" to him to ensure that people are informed about ALS and "what we can do to combat it and improve the landscape."

"Because," he continued, "it's so rocky and littered with hurdles and bureaucracy and all this other nonsense that we're trying to sift through so we can get to a place where we can start working on solutions."

One of Dane's fellow panelists was Michael Grassi, the showrunner, creator, and executive producer of NBC'sBrilliant Minds.Dane appeared on the medical drama, playing a character with ALS, on the series' Nov. 24 episode.

"Eric, I feel like from the very beginning, the lines of communication had to be very open as we sort of entered this process together," Grassi said. "And I think it was just very important for us to meet Eric where he was, and Eric showed up every single day, and he blew us away, and he was incredible."

Grassi noted, too, that two of the show's writers have had family members who struggled with ALS, so they were especially thoughtful about writing the story of a firefighter with ALS figuring out how to share his diagnosis with his family.

It was important to all of them that they didn't sensationalize the disease.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Ahead of the episode, Grassi toldUSA Todaythat Dane's portrayal had been well received when it was filmed.

"I have never seen this happen in my entire career, but he essentially got a 10-minute standing ovation after shooting that scene," Grassi said. "Because it was so beautiful and so honest and so real."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Eric Dane opens up about emotional battle of living with ALS: 'I have no reason to be in a good spirit'

I AM ALS/Youtube ActorEric Danehas been brutally honest about the reality that he's facing after having been diagnosed with ALS, since...
Benji Schwimmer/Instagram; Jason Merritt/FilmMagic Benji Schwimmer; Donyelle Jones

Benji Schwimmer/Instagram; Jason Merritt/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • So You Think You Can Dance finalist Donyelle Jones died 10 years after being diagnosed with breast cancer, her official Instagram page announced on Tuesday, Dec. 2

  • Benji Schwimmer shared a heartfelt tribute to his dance partner with a heartfelt video shortly after

  • Schwimmer said he was "bonded" for life with Jones after the pair were partnered together during season 2 of the competition dance show in 2006

So You Think You Can Dancewinner Benji Schwimmer is honoring his late dance partner Donyelle Denise Wilson, known as Donyelle Jones, afterher deathon Tuesday, Dec. 2.

Schwimmer, 41, shared a combination of archival footage of his time on the competition dance show alongside the late Jones and a heartfelt video message about their friendship, in a lengthy video shared onInstagramon Tuesday, Dec. 2.

Hours earlier, Donyelle's officialInstagrampage shared that she had "transitioned" at 8:34 a.m. She was 46.

Donyelle's death comes nearly 10 years after she wasdiagnosed with stage 3C breast cancer in 2016, whichlater progressed to stage 4 metastatic breast cancer. Donyelle was remembered as "A wife. A daughter. A sister. A friend. And a warrior who kicked cancer's ass every single day she was here."

"Her spirit never dimmed. Her heart never hardened. And even in the storm, she never lost her smile," the statement continued.

In his video reacting to the loss, Schwimmer began: "This morning, I woke up from a dream with tears in my eyes, and there weren't tears of sorrow or pain, but they were tears of joy."

He continued through tears, "I was on a stage like a darkened, ethereal stage, and there was a big misty spotlight, kind of shining, and in the background, out of nowhere, my dance partner and friend, Donyelle, came out, and she was dressed so beautifully."

The pro dancer added that Donyelle was "radiant" and "just glowing and illuminated in a way that only dreams can create." He shared that they then danced and talked together.

"And I started to get emotional because I visited her in the real world, last week, a little bit before Thanksgiving, and was so happy to be with her," Schwimmer recalled of the last time he saw Donyelle. "Here we were dancing out of nowhere a week later, and I was crying tears of joy because she wasn't in pain, and she was healthy, and she was moving and laughing with me. And, just as I was enjoying this moment and moving with her, the dream ended, I woke up at 8:40 a.m. this morning, only to find out that Donyelle had passed away at 8:34 a.m."

Jason Merritt/FilmMagic Donyelle Jones and Benji Schwimmer on So You Think You Can Dance

Jason Merritt/FilmMagic

TheSo You Think You Can Danceseason 2 winner added that "Every memory that I have of her, she has that same ethereal glow, and I just wanted to express my gratitude, my condolences for her family."

He sent love and condolences to Donyelle's husband Tahir and the arts and dance community.

"There are many times in the arts, in the dance world, where it's competitive, and it's a grind, and there's sometimes negative emotions that could cloud the pure joy that dance can radiate within all of us. And Donyelle was never a victim of that," he added of her impact on the dance world.

Schwimmer went on to explain that outside of Donyelle's myriad of professional accomplishments, she most importantly helped him find self confidence. "Before all of that's done, she really was an integral reason to my successes as a person. She helped teach me about just accepting my body as it is, laughing in the moments where it costumes were wonky and weird, and about grinding and working hard and training at whatever age in order to be your best self on and off the dance floor," Schwimmer explained.

"She was taken from us too soon," he added, before explaining that the pair soon hoped to recreate some of their choreography fromSYTYCD. "The same smile that she had on that stage, she had that same smile in that dream, and she had that same smile when I saw her last week for the last time."

Reflecting on the moments they shared together as dance partners, Schwimmer said, "It's not a marriage, but sometimes it feels closer than that, because you're at your most elevated self all the time, or you're at your most humble self in sweatpants, just stressing, and there's no middle ground, there's no rest, there's no easiness."

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Schwimmer noted that he is "so grateful" for the time that he spent with her. "Be grateful of the people in your life. Be grateful for the teachers, the unsung heroes that have gotten you successful in whatever you are, an artist, dancer, be grateful for that."

"I think this is just the beginning for what I think in the future, is going to be some incredible legacy, work done in her name, her honor, and through her inspirational story," he concluded. "And I look forward to taking part of that, and honoring my friend, my dear friend, and my forever partner, in dance. I love you, Donyelle."

Read the original article onPeople

Benji Schwimmer Tearfully Honors 'Forever' “SYTYCD” Partner Donyelle Jones After Her Death: 'An Integral Reason to My Successes As a Person'

Benji Schwimmer/Instagram; Jason Merritt/FilmMagic NEED TO KNOW So You Think You Can Dance finalist Donyelle Jones died 10 years after be...
New Zealand man accused of eating Faberge pendant inspired by Bond movie as police wait for evidence

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Police in New Zealand are waiting for nature to take its course after a man allegedly tried to smuggle a 33,000 New Zealand dollar ($19,000) pendant out of a jewelry store by swallowing it.

The 32-year-old man, who has not been publicly named, is accused of eating an ornateFabergéoctopus pendant at Partridge Jewelers in Auckland on Nov. 28.

Evidence of the alleged theft has yet to emerge, police said Wednesday.

"At the time of his arrest he underwent a medical assessment, and an officer is assigned to constantly monitor the man," Inspector Grae Anderson said in a statement. "At this stage the pendant has not been recovered."

The man was arrested inside the store minutes after the alleged theft. He appeared in the Auckland District Court on Nov. 29, where he did not enter a plea on a charge of theft.

The alleged loot was a limited-edition, Fabergé egg pendant inspired by the 1983James Bondfilm Octopussy. Central to the film's plot is a jewel-smuggling operation that involves a fake Fabergé egg.

The store's website says the egg, only 50 of which have been made, is crafted from gold, painted with green enamel and encrusted with 183 diamonds and two sapphires. The pendant is 8.4 centimeters (3.3 inches) tall and is mounted on a stand.

"The egg opens to reveal an 18ct yellow gold octopus nestled inside, adorned with white diamond suckers and black diamond eyes," an item description said. "The octopus surprise pays homage to the eponymous antagonist at the centre of the Octopussy film."

Time and digestion will tell if another octopus surprise is forthcoming.

"Given this man is in Police custody, we have a duty of care to continue monitoring him given the circumstances of what has occurred," Anderson said.

The accused man is due to appear in court again Dec. 8.

New Zealand man accused of eating Faberge pendant inspired by Bond movie as police wait for evidence

WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Police in New Zealand are waiting for nature to take its course after a man allegedly trie...
German president's UK state visit will celebrate strategic ties and recall historic scars

LONDON (AP) — German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will be greeted by brass bands and royalty Wednesday when he arrives for a U.K. state visit that will celebrate the close ties between the countries while also remembering the scars of the past.

King Charles III will welcome Steinmeier and his wife, Elke Büdenbender, to Windsor Castle for the start of a three-day tour featuring all the pomp and ceremony the U.K. traditionally rolls out for its honored guests. But there will also be a somber note as Steinmeier becomes the first German head of state to make a formal state visit to Britain in 27 years.

On Friday, the couple will visit Coventry Cathedral to commemorate the Nazi bombing of the city, which killed at least 568 people and destroyed or damaged more than half of its homes on the night of Nov. 14, 1940. It was the single most concentrated attack on a British city during World War II.

Germany has apologized more than once for the Nazi regime's atrocities. And during hisown state visit to Germany in 2023,Charles acknowledged the devastation caused by the war,laying a wreathat the remains of St. Nikolai Church in Hamburg to commemorate the more than 30,000 people who were killed during the Allied bombing of the city in July 1943.

"It's a particularly poignant time in British and German history, so the fact that this is being factored into the state visit clearly is important to both sides," said Joe Little, managing editor of Majesty Magazine.

While state visitsare hosted by the king,they are scheduled at the request of the elected government to reward friends — and sometimes nudge reluctant partners — with the red carpet treatment only Britain's royal family can provide.

So there will be the glittering tiaras, displays of military precision and a sumptuous banquet served on 200-year-old silver. There's also a huge Christmas tree in St. George's Hall.

But it's a spectacle with a purpose. Britain and Germany are seeking to underscore the bonds between the two countries as they face the challenges of the war in Ukraine and U.S. President Donald Trump's America First policies, which threaten to upend longstanding trade and security relationships.

The trip will build on the success of Charles' state visit to Germany, when he displayed an ability to properly roll his R's while flipping between German and English in aspeech to the Bundestag, the German parliament.

Making his first state visit since ascending the throne, Charles stressed the long-standing ties between the two countries and the importance of future cooperation.

British officials hope those ties will be cemented by coverage of the glittering events at Windsor Castle.

"It will produce wonderful pictures and these will be seen as symbols for the British public and the German public,'' said Gerhard Dannemann, former head of the Centre for British Studies at Humboldt Universität in Berlin. "And the hope is that ...the German president can emulate,'' what Charles did in 2023.

German president's UK state visit will celebrate strategic ties and recall historic scars

LONDON (AP) — German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier will be greeted by brass bands and royalty Wednesday when he arriv...

 

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