China's Guowang and Qianfan trade the lead past 350 satellites combined
Qianfan jumps back ahead at 182 to Guowang's ~168–190; two constellations planning 28,000+ spacecraft
Summary
China's two state-linked broadband megaconstellations, Guowang ("National Network", 13,000+ planned) and Qianfan/Spacesail ("Thousand Sails", 15,000+ planned), have passed 350 satellites combined and are now trading the domestic lead. A Long March 6A polar launch on 4 June 2026 added 18 Qianfan satellites, lifting it to 182 and back ahead of Guowang (~168–190) for the first time in seven months. Together they plan 28,000+ spacecraft and could consume 70+ of China's 2026 launches. The deployment is Beijing's answer to Starlink and a bid for global broadband standards influence, with spectrum filings racing Western constellations for orbital slots. Both still trail Starlink's ~8,000-plus operational satellites by an order of magnitude.
By the numbers
- 350+, combined satellites launched across both constellations by mid-2026.
- 182, Qianfan count after the 4 June batch; ~168–190 for Guowang.
- 28,000+, total satellites the two programmes plan to deploy.
- 70+, of China's 2026 launches the two may consume.
Why it matters
Whoever fills LEO first locks spectrum and orbital slots and sets de-facto broadband standards for the unconnected world. China's twin constellations are both a Starlink hedge and a sovereignty play, and they push launch cadence and orbital congestion alike.
What to watch
- Batch frequency, whether deployment accelerates past every two-to-three weeks.
- First operational broadband service and export customers.
- Spectrum/slot disputes with Starlink, Kuiper and IRIS².