ISRO To Focus On Advanced Reasearch, Routine work to be done by industry
As part of space reforms for “Unlocking the space potential of India” to enable private players to carry out end-to-end space activities, the establishment of the Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN- SPACe) has been announced recently.
Future of space activities is now changing. Otherwise earlier, all the space activities were done by only ISRO. The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) now intends to offload most of its space-related activities to industry and enhance focus on advanced research, Chairman K Sivan has said, as the government opens up the sector to get private players onboard.
Shri Sivan, who is also Secretary in the Department of Space (DoS), said the reforms initiated in the sector by the government in June last year to promote enhanced private participation in the space domain has generated enthusiasm among the industry. Now, equal opportunity is being given to private players.
Sivan while addressing a webinar organised by the University of Petroleum and Energy Studies (UPES) on “Future of Aerospace & Avionics in India”. He said ISRO can share its technologies with private players and is giving them an opportunity to utilise its facilities.
“We want to hand-hold them to bring them to our (ISRO’s) level so that most of activities that ISRO is doing can be offloaded to industry and we can spend more time on advanced research to take India to the next level (in the space sector), he said.
An autonomous body under the DoS, IN-SPACe acts as a single window nodal agency for enabling and regulating space activities and usage of ISRO facilities by NGPEs (non- government private entities).
It works out a suitable mechanism to offer sharing of technology, expertise and facilities free of cost wherever feasible or at reasonable cost basis to promote NGPEs.
Sivan, however, made it clear in the interaction with students and faculty of the Dehradun-based private university last Friday that Bengaluru-headquartered ISRO is not looking at collaboration with NGPEs at this stage.
ISRO can only have collaboration with partners with equal strength, like international space agencies, he argued, noting that NGPEs in the space sector are still in the growth stage.
The space agency at present is enabling industry to “come up to our level”.
“That is a process. We are hoping that once they grow to our level, then definitely we will be able to have collaboration,” he added.
Union Minister Jitendra Singh, who heads DoS, has said 35 space start-ups and industries were in consultation with ISRO for support related to various domains of space activity such as development of satellites, launch vehicles, develop applications, and providing space based services.
ISRO’s commercial arm NewSpace India Limited (NSIL), incorporated two years ago, is also proactively working to improve the potential of Indian industries by way of technology transfer from ISRO in several identified areas.
“This will definitely help them play an increasing role in the emerging space markets both nationally and globally.
So far, we have entered into 14 such technology transfer agreements and you will see much more such transfers in the days to come”, NSIL Chairman and Managing Director G Narayanan told PTI last week.