Plan for India’s own communication satellite

I now have sufficient facts from Tier 1 sources (isro.gov.in, pib.gov.in) combined with the article content to write the study note.


UPSC Study Note: Plan for India's Own Communication Satellite


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Origins and Rationale

Key Milestones (Chronological)

Year Event
1972 Space Commission and DoS established; ISRO brought under DoS
Apr 1975 Aryabhata launched (Soviet rocket) — India's first satellite [S4]
1975–76 SITE experiment — validates satellite communication for development [S2]
Aug 1979 SLV-3 maiden flight (partial failure) — first Indian launch vehicle [S5]
Jul 1980 SLV-3 second flight successfully places Rohini RS-1 (~40 kg) in orbit — India's first indigenously launched satellite [S5]
Apr 1982 INSAT-1A launched by US Delta rocket — India's first dedicated communications satellite (leased/procured, not fully indigenous) [S6]
Aug 1983 INSAT-1B launched by US Space Shuttle — operationalised; INSAT system commissioned [S3]
1983 onwards INSAT system declared operational — revolutionised telecom, TV broadcasting, meteorology, disaster warning [S3]

Predecessors / Related Initiatives


4. Core Static Facts

Communications Satellite Programme

INSAT System Core Facts

SLV-3 (the indigenous launch vehicle context)

Rohini Satellite


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Geopolitical / Strategic

Economic

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Aryabhata (1975) was India's first satellite — built by ISRO but launched by the Soviet Kosmos-3M rocket (not an Indian vehicle). [S4]
  2. SITE (1975–76) used NASA's ATS-6 satellite — India did not own the satellite during this experiment. [S2]
  3. The 1978 communication satellite plan envisaged using the French Ariane launch vehicle — not an Indian or US vehicle. [S1]
  4. Prof. U. R. Rao announced the plan in Madras (Chennai) at a seminar by the Electronic Engineers' Association, College of Engineering, Guindy. [S1]
  5. Rohini satellite weighed approximately 40 kg and was designed for use with SLV-3. [S1][S5]
  6. SLV-3 was India's first experimental satellite launch vehicle — all-solid, four-stage, height 22 m, weight 17 tonnes, LEO payload ~40 kg. [S5]
  7. SLV-3's first successful orbital flight placed Rohini RS-1 in orbit on July 18, 1980 from SHAR Centre, Sriharikota. [S5]
  8. INSAT-1A (April 1982) was launched by a US Delta rocket — abandoned in September 1983. [S6]
  9. INSAT-1B (August 1983) was launched by the US Space Shuttle — operationalised the INSAT system. [S3]
  10. INSAT system commissioned: 1983 — designed for telecom, TV broadcasting, meteorology, and disaster warning. [S3]
  11. DoS (Department of Space) is under the Prime Minister's Office, not any sectoral ministry. [S2]
  12. The Space Commission was established in 1972, the same year DoS was created and ISRO brought under it. [S2]
  13. GSAT-N2 (CMS-03) — launched by SpaceX Falcon 9, November 2024 — India's heaviest communication satellite (~4,700 kg). [S3]
  14. Prof. U. R. Rao later served as ISRO Chairman (1984–1994) — the same scientist who announced the 1978 plan.
  15. The EOS/SEO (Earth Observation Satellite) programme mentioned alongside the 1978 comms satellite plan eventually evolved into India's IRS (Indian Remote Sensing) satellite series. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping - GS-III: Science & Technology — Space Technology; Indigenisation of technology; India's achievements in Science & Technology. - GS-II: Government policies and interventions; Role of statutory bodies (Space Commission, DoS). - GS-I: Post-Independence consolidation; Impact of modern technology on society.

Specific Syllabus Headings - GS-III: "Achievements of Indians in science & technology; indigenisation of technology and developing new technology." - GS-III: "Space technology — satellites, launch vehicles, applications."

Plausible Mains Questions 1. "Trace the evolution of India's communication satellite programme from the 1970s concept to the operationalisation of INSAT. What strategic lessons does this trajectory offer for India's current space ambitions?" (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "India's early dependence on foreign launch vehicles for its communication satellites was a strategic compulsion, not a choice. Critically examine this statement in light of ISRO's subsequent indigenous launch vehicle development." (GS-III, 10 marks) 3. "The SITE experiment (1975–76) and the INSAT programme represent two phases of India's satellite communication strategy. Analyse their development impacts and institutional legacies." (GS-I/GS-III, 15 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
INSAT System (full series) Direct evolution of the 1978 plan; covers INSAT-1 through INSAT-4 and GSAT series
SLV-3 / ASLV / PSLV / GSLV development The indigenous launcher story that made India less dependent on Ariane/Delta/Shuttle
SITE Experiment (1975–76) Demand-side proof-of-concept that justified investment in India's own comsat
Aryabhata Satellite (1975) India's first satellite; technical heritage for subsequent designs; Prof. Rao's team built it
IN-SPACe and NewSpace India Modern institutional framework enabling private sector in comsat — the 21st-century sequel
GSAT / CMS Series Current generation communications satellites; continuity of INSAT
Satcom Policy of India Regulatory framework governing satellite communication spectrum and orbital slots
Space Commission and Department of Space Institutional architecture; PM's direct oversight of space policy

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Aryabhata's launch vehicle: Aryabhata was built by India but launched by the Soviet Union — not by SLV-3. SLV-3 first successfully launched Rohini in 1980. Many aspirants incorrectly attribute SLV-3 to Aryabhata.

  2. INSAT-1A vs INSAT-1B: INSAT-1A (1982) failed/was abandoned within a year; INSAT-1B (1983) operationalised the system. Questions often test which one "commissioned" INSAT — it is 1B, 1983.

  3. Ariane launch vehicle is French/ESA, not Indian: The 1978 plan envisaged using Ariane as a foreign launcher — this is not an Indian vehicle. Confusing it with ISRO's own LVM3/GSLV is a common trap.

  4. Prof. U. R. Rao's role: He announced the 1978 plan as Director, ISRO Satellite Systems Project; he became ISRO Chairman only in 1984. Do not anachronistically call him "ISRO Chairman" in the 1978 context.

  5. DoS under PM's Office — not a full ministry: The Department of Space is not a standalone ministry; it functions under the Prime Minister's Office with the PM holding the portfolio. Confusing it with MoS (Ministry of Science) or DST is a frequent error.


11. Sources