PSLV setbacks will help in learning, says ISRO chief


PSLV Setbacks Will Help in Learning — ISRO Chief | UPSC Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1963 ISRO founded (as INCOSPAR); formally constituted 1969
10 Aug 1979 First SLV-3 (E01) launch from Sriharikota — partial failure; Rohini satellite not placed in orbit
18 Jul 1980 SLV-3 E02 success — Rohini RS-1 placed in orbit; India becomes 6th spacefaring nation
20 Sep 1993 First PSLV launch (PSLV-D1) — failed (first stage issue)
15 Oct 1994 PSLV-D2 — first successful PSLV flight
2008 Chandrayaan-1 via PSLV-C11
2013 MOM (Mangalyaan) via PSLV-C25
2016 PSLV-C37 — world record 104 satellites in single launch
29 Jan 2025 100th launch from Sriharikota — NVS-02 via GSLV; historic milestone [S4]
18 May 2025 PSLV-C61/EOS-09 (101st launch) — PS3 stage anomaly [S1]
~12 Jan 2026 PSLV-C62/EOS-N1 — PS3 stage anomaly; commercial payloads lost [S2][S3]

4. Core Static Facts

PSLV — Key Technical Parameters - Full form: Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle - Configuration: 4-stage rocket alternating solid (PS1, PS3) and liquid (PS2, PS4) propulsion - PS3 (third stage): solid-propellant stage (HTPB-based); the stage that failed in both C61 and C62 - Variants: PSLV-G (with 6 strap-on boosters), PSLV-CA (Core Alone, no strap-ons), PSLV-XL (extended strap-ons), PSLV-DL, PSLV-QL - Launch pad: Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh - Nodal agency: ISRO under Department of Space, directly under Prime Minister's Office

Missions involved - PSLV-C61/EOS-09: 1,696 kg earth observation satellite; target orbit — 505 km Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit (SSPO); designed for all-weather radar imaging (agriculture, disaster management, surveillance) [S1] - PSLV-C62/EOS-N1: NSIL's 9th dedicated commercial mission; carried 15 co-passenger satellites from domestic and international customers [S2]

Institutional context - NSIL (NewSpace India Limited): commercial arm of ISRO for launch services - IN-SPACe: regulator for private space sector - Enabling legislation: Space Activities Act (pending/draft); Policy: Indian Space Policy 2023


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Administrative / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. PSLV is a 4-stage rocket alternating solid (PS1, PS3) and liquid (PS2, PS4) stages. [S1]
  2. PSLV-C61/EOS-09 was ISRO's 101st launch (not 100th); launched 18 May 2025. [S1]
  3. The 100th launch from Sriharikota was NVS-02 on GSLV, on 29 January 2025. [S4]
  4. Both PSLV-C61 and PSLV-C62 failed at the PS3 (third stage, solid propellant). [S3]
  5. EOS-09 target orbit: 505 km Sun-Synchronous Polar Orbit (SSPO), mass 1,696 kg. [S1]
  6. PSLV-C62 was NSIL's 9th dedicated commercial mission; carried 15 co-passenger satellites. [S2]
  7. The first successful PSLV flight was PSLV-D2 on 15 October 1994. [S4]
  8. ISRO's first SLV launch: 10 August 1979 (SLV-3 E01) — partial failure. [S4]
  9. India became the 6th spacefaring nation after SLV-3 E02 successfully placed Rohini RS-1 in orbit on 18 July 1980. [S4]
  10. NSIL (NewSpace India Limited) is ISRO's commercial launch services arm (not IN-SPACe). [S2]
  11. IN-SPACe is the regulatory body for private space sector participation in India. [S2]
  12. ISRO is under Department of Space, which reports directly to the Prime Minister. [S5]
  13. The PSLV-C37 mission (2017) holds the record of 104 satellites in a single launch. [Historical knowledge, consistent with S4]
  14. Dr. V. Narayanan is the current ISRO Chairman (as of March 2026). [S5]
  15. HTPB (Hydroxyl-Terminated Polybutadiene) is the solid propellant used in PSLV's PS1 and PS3 stages. [S1]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper mapping: - GS-III: Science & Technology — Space; Role of ISRO; Indigenization; Commercial space - GS-II: Government institutions, Accountability, Statutory bodies

Syllabus headings: - Achievements of Indians in S&T; Indigenization of technology - Awareness in Space; Role of IT in development

Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "Back-to-back PSLV failures have raised questions about ISRO's quality management and commercial space ambitions. Examine the systemic challenges and institutional lessons." 2. "India's space programme has historically converted failures into milestones. In the context of PSLV-C61 and C62 setbacks, analyse the governance, technical, and commercial implications for India's space sector." 3. "Critically evaluate the role of public-sector R&D institutions like ISRO in balancing scientific learning culture with commercial reliability imperatives."


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Why Connected
Indian Space Policy 2023 Defines framework for private sector, NSIL, IN-SPACe roles — directly relevant context
GSLV Mk III / LVM3 India's heavy-lift vehicle; Gaganyaan launcher; contrasts with PSLV in capability
Gaganyaan Mission Human spaceflight programme — reliability of launch vehicles is a core prerequisite
IN-SPACe & commercial space ecosystem PSLV failures affect private launch startups (Agnikul, Skyroot) dependent on ISRO infrastructure
Chandrayaan / Mangalyaan series Flagship PSLV-launched missions — demonstrate stakes of PSLV reliability
NSIL (NewSpace India Limited) ISRO's commercial arm directly impacted; revenue, contracts at risk
India's Space Activities Act (Draft) Legislative framework for ISRO accountability and private participation
APJ Abdul Kalam & SLV Programme Historical precedent of failure-to-success trajectory; frequently cited by ISRO leadership

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. PSLV-C61 was NOT the 100th launch — it was the 101st; the 100th was NVS-02/GSLV on 29 Jan 2025. Conflating PSLV mission numbers with total ISRO/SDSC launch count is a frequent error. [S1][S4]
  2. PS3 is solid, not liquid — candidates often get confused thinking the third stage is liquid; PSLV alternates S-L-S-L (solid PS1, liquid PS2, solid PS3, liquid PS4).
  3. NSIL ≠ IN-SPACe: NSIL is the commercial executor (launch services, satellite building); IN-SPACe is the regulator/promoter for private players. Do not swap these.
  4. The 1979 SLV failure was partial, not total — the vehicle flew but Rohini was not achieved in stable orbit; the 1980 mission (SLV-3 E02) was the first full success.
  5. ISRO is under Department of Space, NOT DST — a classic ministry-confusion trap. Department of Space has its own Cabinet-rank secretary and reports to the PM, separate from Ministry of Science & Technology / DST.

11. Sources