# China launches Haiyang-2E ocean monitoring satellite, its 45th space mission of 2026
> A Long March-4B lifted off from Jiuquan at 23:46 UTC on July 1 (07:46 CST July 2), placing the HY-2E satellite into a sun-synchronous orbit; the spacecraft is the first replacement for China's aging ocean-observation trio and begins a three-satellite renewal

**Meta:** type: event · date: 2026-07-02 · heads: 長期戦, 誰の金か · 3 takes · 3 lenses · 2 regions

## Summary

China's [Casc](/ja/entity/casc) launched the Haiyang-2E (HY-2E) ocean-monitoring satellite on a Long March-4B rocket from Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center at 23:46 UTC on July 1 (07:46 CST July 2), the country's 45th space launch of 2026 and the 654th Long March flight overall. The satellite was placed into a polar, sun-synchronous orbit from which it will measure sea-surface temperature, ocean wind vectors, and wave height. It is the first of three planned replacements for the Haiyang-2B, 2C, and 2D satellites launched between 2018-2021, which are approaching end of operational life. [China](/ja/entity/china)'s maritime monitoring data feeds ship traffic management, fishing vessel oversight, and climate research.

## The split

Chinese state media framed HY-2E in civilian ocean-safety terms: sea rescue operations, storm surge warnings, and fisheries monitoring. International space-tracking organisations note that the Haiyang microwave-radar sensors also provide dual-use military value, mapping surface ship movements and subsurface signatures relevant to naval intelligence. The launch continues [China](/ja/entity/china)'s high pace of launches in 2026, on track to surpass its 2025 total of 62 missions. The US and Europe maintain separate but less frequent ocean-observation constellations (NOAA-Suomi, ESA Sentinel-6).

## By the numbers

- 23:46 UTC July 1 (07:46 CST July 2), exact liftoff time from Jiuquan
- 45th, China's space mission count for 2026 (on pace for 80-90 by year-end)
- 654th, total Long March launch overall
- 3, satellites in the Haiyang-2 series being replaced (2B, 2C, 2D)
- 2018-2021, years the original trio were launched

## Why it matters

Continuous ocean observation is infrastructure for [China](/ja/entity/china)'s expanding maritime strategy: the Haiyang network underpins both its commercial fishing fleet, the world's largest by tonnage, and its coast guard and navy operations in the South China Sea and western Pacific. The replacement of the aging trio maintains a capability [China](/ja/entity/china) built over two decades. With HY-2E's launch, China now operates one of the world's most comprehensive satellite-based maritime surveillance networks.

## What to watch

- Launch dates of the two follow-on replacement satellites (HY-2F, HY-2G)
- Whether [China](/ja/entity/china) shares HY-2E ocean-current data with ASEAN neighbours or uses it exclusively
- US Space Force and NOAA responses to the expanded Chinese ocean-observation footprint
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## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### Chinese state media
- **CGTN** (China, en) — Confirmed the 07:46 UTC liftoff and the successful insertion of HY-2E into its preset orbit. Framed the satellite as serving maritime safety, disaster response, and ocean environmental monitoring, citing its measurement of sea-surface temperature, wave height, and marine wind vectors.
  > "The Long March-4B rocket successfully launched the Haiyang-2E satellite at 07:46 Beijing time on July 2, China's 45th space mission of 2026."
  Source: https://news.cgtn.com/news/2026-07-02/China-launches-new-satellite-for-marine-observation-1OrAuSqVyog/p.html

### Chinese state media (English edition)
- **China Daily** (China, en) — Placed HY-2E in the context of China's ocean observation programme: HY-2B/C/D were launched between 2018-2021 and are approaching end-of-life; HY-2E is the first of three replacement satellites. The article noted the Haiyang series feeds ocean current data into China's marine search-and-rescue and fishing vessel monitoring systems.
  > "HY-2E is the first of three satellites that will replace the aging Haiyang-2B, -2C, and -2D constellation, extending China's continuous ocean observation capability."
  Source: https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202607/02/WS6a461a34a310986e2b4632fc.html

### unlabelled
- **Space Launch Schedule** (Global, en) — 
  Source: https://www.spacelaunchschedule.com/category/peoples-republic-of-china/

## Across the graph
- Related: [[china-megaconstellation]], [[china-lunar]], [[china-launch]]
- Entities: China, Casc

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Canonical: https://rbtfl.xyz/ja/n/china-haiyang-2e-launch-jul2