Indian space programme goes commercial from today

Indian space programme goes commercial from today
Monday, April 23, 2007

BANGALORE: India will launch an Italian satellite via a home-built rocket this week, seeking entry into an exclusive club of nations that have put their space programmes to commercial use.

The Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) will on Monday (today) carry the Agile astronomical satellite from the Sriharikota spaceport, 80 kilometres north of Chennai in south India, space agency officials said here. India wants to join and compete with the United States, Russia, China, the Ukraine and the European Space Agency in offering commercial satellite launch services, a market worth up to 2.5 billion dollars a year.

Monday’s launch of the 352-kilogram Agile satellite will be a key test of the country’s commercial launch capabilities. “Success is very important in a mission like this because that’s what customers look for,” said KR Sridhara Murthi, executive director of Antrix Corp., the marketing arm of India’s space programme.

India started its space programme in 1963, and has since developed and put its own satellites into space. It has also designed and built launch rockets to reduce its dependence on overseas space agencies. It carried out the first successful launch of a domestic satellite, which weighed 35 kg, by a home-built rocket in 1980.

In those days, reaping commercial benefits from the programme was far from the minds of Indian policymakers and scientists, who were preoccupied with harnessing space technology to boost deficient communications and broadcasting facilities.

Satellites were designed to map natural resources and predict the weather to help farmers and the teeming masses of rural poor. “We haven’t reached the end of the road on those objectives yet,” said Murthi, a mechanical engineer with an MBA from the Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad.
Murthi said India could not afford to make commerce the primary objective of its space programme until the country’s development goals were met, and could only offer “spareable capacity” to potential customers.

Nonetheless, India wanted to be recognised as a “serious player” in space commerce, aiming for a 20 percent share of the satellite launch market, with plans to carry out two or three missions a year, he said. Antrix also plans to offer overseas customers a package deal under which local engineers would design and fabricate satellites for launch by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), which runs India’s space programme.

“We call that on-orbit delivery,” said Murthi, who was previously at Bangalore-based ISRO, where he took part in satellite programme planning and technology transfers to companies. For Monday’s launch of the Italian satellite, ISRO is charging $11 million, the Press Trust of India has reported. Space agency officials have confirmed the fee is close to that figure. afp

Daily Times

Hindustan’s space and missiles industry has done well under the leadership of Muslim *‘Missile Man of India’ *Dr. A.P.J. Abdul Kalam.