Losing the way


Study Note: NavIC / IRNSS — "Losing the Way"

(The Hindu, 20 March 2026 — Editorial on India's Navigation Satellite Constellation in Crisis)


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1999 Kargil War — U.S. denies GPS data to India; strategic impetus for indigenous navigation system created. [S4]
2006 IRNSS programme formally approved by Government of India.
2013 IRNSS-1A launched — first satellite of the constellation. [S1]
2016–2018 Seven first-generation IRNSS satellites (1A–1G/1H/1I) launched; rubidium atomic clocks sourced from Swiss firm SpectraTime. [S4]
2018 ISRO begins transition to indigenous rubidium atomic clocks developed by ISRO–Space Applications Centre (SAC). [S4]
May 2023 NVS-01 launched — first second-generation satellite; first to carry indigenous ACMU (Atomic Clock Monitoring Unit). [S1][S4]
2020 Space Sector Reforms: ISRO reoriented to R&D; NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) created for commercialisation. [S4]
Jan 2025 NVS-02 launched by GSLV-F15; placed in incorrect orbit. [S2]
Mar 2026 IRNSS-1F clock fails; constellation drops to 3 PNT-capable satellites. [S4]

4. Core Static Facts

System Identity - Full name: Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System (IRNSS) / NavIC - Implementing agency: ISRO (Department of Space, under PMO) - 11 satellites launched since 2013. [S1] - Coverage area: Indian subcontinent + 1,500 km beyond borders - Two services: Standard Positioning Service (SPS) (civilian) and Restricted Service (RS) (military, encrypted)

Constellation Architecture (as of Aug 2025) - 4 satellites providing PNT services - 4 satellites providing one-way message broadcast only (clocks failed) - 1 satellite decommissioned (end-of-life) - 2 satellites that failed to reach intended orbit [S1][S4] - Minimum PNT threshold: 4 satellites simultaneously visible

Atomic Clock Technology - First-gen: Rubidium atomic clocks by SpectraTime, Switzerland — recurring failure record [S4] - Second-gen: Indigenous rubidium atomic clocks by ISRO-SAC; first flown on NVS-01 (May 2023) [S1][S4] - ACMU (Atomic Clock Monitoring Unit) — subsystem providing 10.23 MHz on-board Master Timing Reference [S1]

NVS Series (Second Generation) - NVS-01: May 2023, GSLV-F12; first indigenous clock - NVS-02: 29 Jan 2025, GSLV-F15; orbit anomaly [S2] - NVS-03: planned by end-2025 [S2]

Governance - Space sector reforms: 2020 — ISRO (R&D), NSIL (commercialisation), IN-SPACe (private sector regulation) - No national space law enacted — ISRO acts as designer, operator, and regulator simultaneously [S4] - Primary use: defence programme managed by ISRO [S4]


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Strategic / Geopolitical

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance

Economic

Legal / Constitutional


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. NavIC stands for Navigation with Indian Constellation; formally known as IRNSS (Indian Regional Navigation Satellite System). [S1]
  2. India has launched 11 NavIC satellites since 2013; as of March 2026, only 3 are PNT-capable. [S1][S4]
  3. A minimum of 4 PNT-capable satellites must be simultaneously visible for uninterrupted navigation service. [S4]
  4. First-generation IRNSS satellites use rubidium atomic clocks sourced from SpectraTime, Switzerland. [S4]
  5. ISRO's Space Applications Centre (SAC) developed India's indigenous rubidium atomic clock for NavIC. [S1]
  6. NVS-01 (launched May 2023, GSLV-F12) was the first NavIC satellite to carry an indigenous atomic clock. [S4]
  7. NVS-02 was launched by GSLV-F15 on 29 January 2025 from Sriharikota's Second Launch Pad; placed in incorrect orbit (170 × 37,785 km, 20.8° inclination). [S2]
  8. The Atomic Clock Monitoring Unit (ACMU) provides the 10.23 MHz on-board Master Timing Reference in NavIC satellites. [S1]
  9. NavIC's strategic rationale traces to US refusal to share GPS data during the 1999 Kargil War. [S4]
  10. Under 2020 Space Sector Reforms: ISRO handles R&D; NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) handles commercialisation; IN-SPACe regulates private sector. [S4]
  11. IRNSS-1F, launched March 2016, completed its 10-year design life just 3 days before its atomic clock failed (13 March 2026). [S4]
  12. India is a signatory to the Outer Space Treaty, 1967 (Article VI requires national law for private space operators) — but no National Space Law exists as of 2026. [S4]
  13. NavIC provides two services: SPS (civilian, open) and RS (restricted/military, encrypted). [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Papers - GS-III: Space technology, indigenisation, critical infrastructure, internal security (navigation dependency) - GS-II: Government policy, institutional design (absence of space law), regulatory reform

Syllabus Headings - GS-III: Achievements of Indians in science & technology; indigenisation of technology and developing new technology; awareness in the fields of space - GS-II: Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors and issues arising out of their design and implementation

Plausible Mains Questions 1. "India's NavIC programme is at a crossroads — between strategic ambition and operational reality." Critically examine the technical, governance, and policy challenges facing India's regional navigation satellite system. (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "The 2020 Space Sector Reforms were a structural leap, but without a National Space Law, they remain incomplete." Discuss in the context of NavIC's operational failures and ISRO's institutional conflicts. (GS-II/III, 15 marks) 3. Analyse how the failure of India's NavIC constellation underscores the risks of strategic dependency on imported critical components and evaluate ISRO's indigenisation pathway. (GS-III, 10 marks)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
India's Space Sector Reforms (2020) ISRO/NSIL/IN-SPACe framework directly governs NavIC's future
Kargil War (1999) & Strategic Lessons The very trigger for NavIC; tests on strategic autonomy
Outer Space Treaty & International Space Law Absence of Indian space law is a NavIC governance gap
GNSS Systems (GPS, GLONASS, Galileo, BeiDou) Comparison context for MCQs on global navigation systems
Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence/Space Atomic clock indigenisation is a flagship case study
GSLV Programme & Launch Vehicle Reliability NVS-02 orbit anomaly implicates GSLV performance
Critical Information Infrastructure Protection NavIC as dual-use (civilian + military) critical infrastructure
NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) The commercialisation vehicle for space; NavIC services commercialisation

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. NavIC ≠ GPS replacement globally — NavIC covers only the Indian subcontinent + 1,500 km, not global coverage (GPS is global). Confusing the two in MCQs is a common trap.
  2. Wrong launch vehicle for NVS-01 vs NVS-02: NVS-01 → GSLV-F12; NVS-02 → GSLV-F15. Aspirants mix these up.
  3. SAC vs ISRO headquarters: The indigenous atomic clock was developed by ISRO-Space Applications Centre (SAC), Ahmedabad — not by ISRO HQ Bengaluru or VSSC. Centre attribution matters in Prelims.
  4. NSIL vs IN-SPACe: NSIL = commercialisation arm (like a PSU); IN-SPACe = regulatory body for private space firms. These are frequently conflated.
  5. "11 satellites launched" ≠ "11 operational": Only 3 are PNT-capable (March 2026). Prelims options will exploit the difference between satellites launched, in orbit, operational, and PNT-capable.
  6. Kargil–NavIC link: Some aspirants attribute NavIC's origin to the 2008 Mumbai attacks or to a WTO dispute — the correct trigger is Kargil 1999. [S4]

11. Sources