-
Advertisement
Science
ChinaScience

Steve Durst – the US citizen space diplomat who reached out to China

Durst, who has died aged 82, bridged a political divide for the ‘shared excitement of exploring the cosmos’

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
9
Steve Durst (second right) poses with collaboration partners from mainland China, Hong Kong and Thailand at the second International Deep Space Exploration Conference (Tiandu Forum) in Anhui, in September 2024. Photo: Handout
Ling Xinin Ohio
Steve Durst, a US space entrepreneur who spent decades building rare bridges with China’s space sector despite restrictions on official cooperation, has died aged 82.

Durst, who founded the non-profit International Lunar Observatory Association (ILOA), was publishing on China’s astronaut training as early as 1980, when the country’s human space flight ambitions were still little known to the outside world.

He died at his home in California last month, shortly after attending a workshop in Chiang Mai, Thailand.

01:57

China’s Chang’e-6 mission returns to Earth with first samples from moon’s far side

China’s Chang’e-6 mission returns to Earth with first samples from moon’s far side
There, his team and collaborators from mainland China, Hong Kong and Thailand reviewed progress on a small but cutting-edge optical camera that ILOA helped fund, which will fly aboard China’s Chang’e-7 mission to the moon’s south pole, scheduled for later this year.
Advertisement

“The telescope will stand as Steve’s final, major space legacy, and it’s both poignant and profoundly fitting,” said Quentin Parker, director of the University of Hong Kong’s Laboratory for Space Research, a key international partner in the project.

“Steve was a proud and patriotic American,” Parker said. “He loved his country, its pioneering spirit and its long history of trailblazing achievements in space.”

Advertisement

But he also invested time, energy and both political and financial capital in building constructive, practical collaborations with China’s space community “at a time when doing so was neither straightforward nor fashionable in some Western circles – and is increasingly difficult today”, Parker added.

Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x