External team involved in PSLV probe; next launch date in June, says Minister


PSLV Consecutive Failures, External Probe & Recovery — UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1993 First PSLV launch (PSLV-D1) — failed (first stage)
1994 PSLV-D2 — first successful launch
2008 Chandrayaan-1 launched on PSLV-C11
2013 Mars Orbiter Mission (Mangalyaan) on PSLV-C25
2017 Record 104 satellites in single launch — PSLV-C37
May 2025 PSLV-C61 fails; EOS-09 (RISAT-1B) lost; third-stage PS3 anomaly [S1]
Jan 2026 PSLV-C62 fails; 16 satellites lost; same PS3 stage fails [S2]
Feb 2026 MoS Jitendra Singh confirms external probe team; June 2026 relaunch target [S3]

4. Core Static Facts


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Strategic / Geopolitical

Administrative / Governance

Ethical / Governance


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PSLV-C61 was ISRO's 101st launch mission (May 18, 2025). [S1]
  2. EOS-09 (also designated RISAT-1B) is a C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellite — lost in the PSLV-C61 failure. [S1]
  3. Both PSLV-C61 (2025) and PSLV-C62 (2026) failures occurred at the third stage (PS3 — solid propellant stage). [S1][S2]
  4. The PS3 stage of PSLV uses Hydroxyl Terminated Poly-Butadiene (HTPB) as solid propellant.
  5. PSLV-C62 was tasked with placing 16 satellites into orbit before failing on 12 January 2026. [S3]
  6. The Minister who announced the external probe and June 2026 relaunch target was Jitendra Singh, MoS for Science & Technology and Space (not the full Cabinet Minister). [S3]
  7. ISRO functions under the Department of Space, which is directly under the Prime Minister's Office (PMO). [S2]
  8. ISRO has scheduled 18 launches in 2026, of which 6 involve private sector satellites. [S3]
  9. 3 major foreign launches (including from Japan) are scheduled for 2027. [S3]
  10. An independent/external third-party team was constituted for investigating consecutive PSLV failures — a first in ISRO's history in this context. [S3]
  11. PSLV holds the record for launching 104 satellites in a single mission (PSLV-C37, 2017).
  12. The space policy framework is governed by the Space Activities Act, 2023 and India's obligations under the Outer Space Treaty (1967).
  13. Commercial/promotional launch services by ISRO are routed through NewSpace India Limited (NSIL).
  14. The PSLV-C61 failure analysis report was submitted to the PMO (not Ministry of Science & Technology). [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

Parameter Detail
GS Paper GS-III primarily — Science & Technology, Space Policy; also GS-II (governance, accountability)
Syllabus heading "Awareness in the fields of IT, Space, Computers, Robotics, Nano-technology, Bio-technology and issues relating to Intellectual Property Rights"

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "Consecutive PSLV failures in 2025–26 have raised questions about quality control in ISRO's solid propellant stages. Critically examine the institutional mechanisms for failure analysis and the implications for India's commercial space ambitions." 2. "Evaluate the significance of involving external/independent teams in investigating failures of national space launch vehicles. What lessons can India draw from international practices such as NASA's Mission Investigation Board?" 3. "India's space economy target of capturing 10% of the global market by 2033 hinges on launch reliability. Analyse the structural and policy challenges ISRO faces in ensuring consistent PSLV performance in an era of increasing private competition."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
IN-SPACe and NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) Bodies governing private sector participation and commercial launches affected by PSLV reliability
India's Space Policy 2023 / Space Activities Act Statutory framework underpinning all ISRO launches and private space activity
EOS satellite series (Earth Observation Satellites) EOS-09/RISAT-1B was the payload lost in C-61; understanding SAR-based surveillance is key
SSLV (Small Satellite Launch Vehicle) Alternative launch vehicle ISRO is developing; context for diversification post-PSLV failures
Gaganyaan Mission India's human spaceflight mission uses the LVM3; rocket safety and failure analysis directly relevant
RISAT series & dual-use satellites Strategic importance of SAR satellites for defence and disaster management
Global commercial launch market (SpaceX, Arianespace, JAXA) Competitive context for India's launch market share ambitions

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong stage: Aspirants may confuse PSLV's four stages. Both 2025–26 failures occurred at PS3 (third, solid stage) — NOT PS2 (liquid, Vikas engine) or PS4.
  2. Wrong ministry: ISRO/Department of Space is under the PMO directly, not under the Ministry of Science & Technology — though the MoS for Science & Technology holds the Space portfolio as a combined charge.
  3. EOS-09 ≠ remote sensing only: EOS-09 (RISAT-1B) is a strategic/dual-use satellite (SAR, C-band) with defence applications — not a civilian weather/crop satellite.
  4. PSLV-C37 record confusion: The 104-satellite record was in 2017 (PSLV-C37), not a recent mission; do not conflate with the 16-satellite C-62 mission.
  5. NSIL vs. IN-SPACe: NSIL (NewSpace India Limited) is the commercial arm of ISRO handling satellite launches for commercial clients. IN-SPACe is the regulatory/promotional authority for private players. These are frequently confused in MCQs.

11. Sources


Note: All facts are cited inline. Tier 1 (isro.gov.in) sources confirm mission identities and failure sequence; the article [S3] is the primary source for the February 2026 ministerial statements, external probe confirmation, and relaunch timeline.