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Looking at spaceflight failures cannot be limited to the surface; it must be considered from the perspective of the industrial chain. What does failure mean? It means the need for more component procurement, equipment upgrades, and technological improvements—all of which require real financial investment. The orders and revenue opportunities for related enterprises emerge from this, which is the logical reality of the industrial chain.
The key point is that failure precisely proves the difficulty of commercial spaceflight. What does the difficulty indicate? It shows that there is indeed a gap compared to international advanced levels, competition pressure is increasing, and time costs are rising. Under these circumstances, it is necessary to increase investment and policy support for the commercial space sector to accelerate the pace of catching up. Failure does not mean giving up; instead, it calls for more decisive support.
This is also why every major setback in space projects often leads to a reorganization and upgrade of the entire industrial chain. If viewed deeply enough, the failure phase actually contains opportunities for industry restructuring.