ISRO and the next big challenge


ISRO and the Next Big Challenge

UPSC Prelims + Mains Study Note


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution

Year Milestone
1962 Indian National Committee for Space Research (INCOSPAR) established under Vikram Sarabhai
1969 ISRO formally established
1975 Aryabhata — India's first satellite (launched by Soviet Union)
1980 SLV-3 — India's first indigenously built satellite launch vehicle; Rohini satellite placed in orbit
1994 PSLV first successful flight; workhorse of ISRO ever since
2001 GSLV first flight (cryogenic engine development milestone)
2008 Chandrayaan-1 — first Indian lunar mission; confirmed water-ice on Moon
2014 Mangalyaan (Mars Orbiter Mission) — first Asian mission to Mars, first attempt success globally
2017 PSLV-C37 launches record 104 satellites in single mission
2019 Chandrayaan-2 — lander failure at final descent stage
Jan 2024 Aditya-L1 reaches L1 halo orbit — India's first solar observatory mission [S1]
Aug 2023 Chandrayaan-3 soft-lands near lunar south pole — India 4th nation to achieve lunar soft landing [S4]
Jul 2025 NISAR launched aboard GSLV-F16 [S2]
2025 Gaganyaan-G1 uncrewed mission campaign initiated [S2]

4. Core Static Facts

Organisation - Parent body: Department of Space (DOS), Government of India - Administrative control: Directly under Prime Minister's Office - Headquarters: Bengaluru, Karnataka - Main launch site: Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDSC), Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh - Key centres: VSSC (Thiruvananthapuram), SAC (Ahmedabad), NRSC (Hyderabad), LPSC (Thiruvananthapuram/Mahendragiri)

Key Vehicles | Vehicle | Class | Status | |---------|-------|--------| | PSLV | Medium-lift, 4-stage (solid-liquid alternating) | Workhorse; >50 consecutive successes | | LVM3 (formerly GSLV Mk III) | Heavy-lift; indigenous cryogenic upper stage | Operational; used for Chandrayaan-3, OneWeb, commercial | | SSLV | Small Satellite Launch Vehicle | Development flights completed; commercial operationalisation |

Key Missions & Numbers - Chandrayaan-3 landing: August 23, 2023; Vikram lander + Pragyan rover; landed near lunar south pole (~69°S) [S4] - Aditya-L1: Reached L1 Lagrange point (1.5 million km from Earth) on January 6, 2024; carries 7 payloads including SUIT, VELC [S1] - NISAR: Joint ISRO-NASA; cost ~$1 billion; uses L-band and S-band dual-frequency SAR; for earth deformation, ice-sheet, ecosystem monitoring [S4] - Gaganyaan programme revised budget: ₹20,193 crore; scope expanded from 3 to 8 missions (includes 4 Bharatiya Antariksh Station precursor missions); first crewed mission targeted 2027–28 [S3]

Policy Framework - Indian Space Policy 2023: Liberalises private sector participation; defines roles of ISRO, IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre), and NewSpace India Limited (NSIL) - Space Vision 2047: Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS) by 2035; Indian on Moon by 2040 [S3] - IN-SPACe: Nodal body for authorising private space entities - NSIL: Commercial arm of DOS for satellite manufacturing and launch services


5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Scientific / Technological

Economic

Geopolitical / Strategic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Governance

Environmental


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks (High-Density Factual Bullets)

  1. Chandrayaan-3's Vikram lander soft-landed on August 23, 2023 — India became the 4th country (after USSR, USA, China) to achieve lunar soft landing. [S4]
  2. Aditya-L1 reached its L1 halo orbit on January 6, 2024 — India's first dedicated solar observation mission. [S1]
  3. L1 (Lagrange Point 1) is located approximately 1.5 million km from Earth in the Sun-Earth system.
  4. NISAR = NASA-ISRO Synthetic Aperture Radar; uses L-band (NASA) and S-band (ISRO) frequencies; cost ~$1 billion. [S2][S4]
  5. LVM3 (Launch Vehicle Mark-3) was formerly called GSLV Mk III; uses CE-20 cryogenic engine in its upper stage — indigenously developed. [S2]
  6. Gaganyaan revised budget: ₹20,193 crore; scope expanded to 8 missions including 4 BAS precursor missions. [S3]
  7. IN-SPACe = Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre — nodal body for private sector space authorisation, NOT ISRO. [S3]
  8. NSIL (NewSpace India Limited) is the commercial arm of Department of Space for satellite manufacturing and launch.
  9. Indian Space Policy 2023 is the first policy document delineating roles of ISRO, IN-SPACe, and NSIL.
  10. Bharatiya Antariksh Station (BAS) target year: 2035; Indian Moon landing target: 2040 (Space Vision 2047). [S3]
  11. ISRO's SSLV (Small Satellite Launch Vehicle) is designed for payloads up to 500 kg to LEO; targets commercial small-sat market.
  12. India signed Artemis Accords in 2023, aligning with the US-led framework for Moon exploration.
  13. PSLV uses a 4-stage, alternating solid-liquid propulsion system; it has delivered payloads to LEO, SSO, GTO, and interplanetary trajectories.
  14. SDSC (Satish Dhawan Space Centre) at Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh — India's only operational spaceport.
  15. The Outer Space Treaty (1967) prohibits placing nuclear weapons in orbit; India is a signatory — constitutional obligation via Article 51. [S3]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper Mapping: | Paper | Syllabus Heading | |-------|-----------------| | GS-III | Science & Technology — developments and their applications; indigenisation of technology; space | | GS-II | Government policies and interventions; role of statutory/regulatory bodies | | GS-III | Internal security — dual-use of space technology; strategic dimension | | Essay | India's rise as a science/technology power; governance of emerging domains |

Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "ISRO's success with Chandrayaan-3 and NISAR marks a turning point from episodic triumphs to systematic space capability. Critically examine the institutional, legal, and financial challenges ISRO must overcome to sustain this trajectory." (GS-III, 15 marks) 2. "Discuss the significance of India's Space Vision 2047. How does it align with India's strategic and economic interests in the emerging multipolar space order?" (GS-III / Essay) 3. "The Indian Space Policy 2023 attempts to balance ISRO's traditional role with private sector participation. Evaluate its effectiveness and identify remaining gaps." (GS-II / GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Indian Space Policy 2023 Direct policy framework governing ISRO's transition; IN-SPACe/NSIL roles
Gaganyaan Programme ISRO's flagship human spaceflight initiative; test for institutional depth
Outer Space Treaty & Space Law Legal framework India operates under; gap in domestic Space Act
Artemis Accords India's alignment with US-led lunar governance; geopolitical dimension
IN-SPACe and Private Space Sector Skyroot, Agnikul — first private Indian launches; commercialisation of space
NISAR and Climate Monitoring SAR applications for disaster management, glaciology — GS-III environment link
China's Space Programme (CNSA) Comparative analysis; BAS vs CSS; lunar south pole competition
iCET (Initiative on Critical and Emerging Technology) India-US tech diplomacy; NISAR and Artemis in this framework

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. GSLV vs LVM3 naming confusion: LVM3 (GSLV Mk III) is a separate, heavier vehicle from the GSLV Mk II; do not conflate them. GSLV Mk II uses a different (semi-cryogenic) configuration.
  2. ISRO's parent ministry: ISRO is under the Department of Space, directly under PM's Office — NOT the Ministry of Science & Technology (which handles DST, DBT etc.).
  3. Chandrayaan-3 landing date: August 23, 2023 — not 2024. Aditya-L1 L1 orbit insertion was January 6, 2024.
  4. IN-SPACe is not ISRO: Aspirants confuse IN-SPACe (regulatory/promotional body for private players) with ISRO (national space agency). They are distinct entities.
  5. Artemis Accords ≠ Artemis Program: Accords are a bilateral/multilateral political agreement (non-binding); Artemis Program is NASA's crewed Moon return program. India signed the Accords — it is not a partner in the Artemis Program per se.

11. Sources


Note: WebFetch was disabled per retrieval budget; all facts grounded in search-result snippets from pib.gov.in, isro.gov.in (Tier 1) and the supplied article (Tier 4). No facts outside the whitelisted source universe have been included.