(SiliconIndia)

ISRO goes global 
Thursday, December 30, 2004 

NEW DELHI :In 2004 the Indian Space Research
Organisation (ISRO) stepped out into the world and
took steps to engage it. This marks a watershed in the
life of an organisation that has had to rely on its
own devices. 

During the year, India hosted a high profile
conference in Bangalore on Indo-US civilian space
co-operation, attended by top NASA officials and a
host of US aerospace companies. ISRO is looking at
innovative ways to engage multinational aerospace
firms like Boeing, to take its own growth to the next
level. 

ISRO announced at the conference that it had awarded a
contract to US-based Raytheon to supply major
subsystems for an ambitious satellite-based augmented
navigation network, GAGAN. Boeing circulated a press
note saying it had US government approval to talk to
ISRO on finding common ground. 

Experts studying the impact of US strategic and the
closely-linked trade policies, however, point out that
not much has changed on the ground. 

This is despite Kenneth Juster, a US undersecretary in
the department of commerce, telling the conference
that over 90 per cent of export licence applications
were either cleared or didn’t need licences. Export of
technologies needed by ISRO continue to be stringently
monitored by the US state department. 

Licences continue to be denied most of the time. Plus,
in the run up to the US presidential elections, ISRO
saw little change in the policy of disallowing exports
of technologies from US-based firms which could speed
up ISRO’s programmes. 

US exports of high technology to ISRO or related
‘entities’ was only at some $57 million last year. G
Madhavan Nair, ISRO’s chairman has gone on record
saying it could be tripled or more. 

Some think tanks explain this caution by pointing to
the use of an ISRO-developed engine in the country’s
ballistic missile, Agni, or even the organisation’s
capability to provide satellite imagery with a
one-metre resolution for border security. 

ISRO officials say these were no more than spin-off
applications and never at the heart of their strongly
civilian mandate. Nair was being both pragmatic and
elliptically eloquent when he suggested at the
conference that “perhaps it will take some time for
mutual trust to develop”. 

Engines for ballistic missiles apart, the year also
showed how tightly protected the third party satellite
launch services market is. 

ISRO has launched four small satellites, including a
Korean and a German payload. Three more such
satellites will be launched in late 2005 or early
2006, onboard ISRO’s polar satellite launch vehicles,
for Singapore, Europe and Indonesia. 

But, a cartel, including American and European private
launch vehicle companies, backed by their respective
governments, will not allow parties with commercial
satellites that are significant for other satellite
based downstream businesses to seek ISRO’s services. 

“The September 11 attacks on the US made matters
worse,” a senior ISRO official said. “There was
already overcapacity in the launch vehicle market and
the reduction in the number of satellites launched
post-9/11 didn’t help,” an official said. 

Having thrived on being stonewalled by the West, ISRO
is looking at alternatives. 

The Next Steps initiative on co-operation in high
technology areas, started by former prime minister
Atal Behari Vajpayee and American President George
Bush is part of the effort to remove political
roadblocks in the way of ISRO’s commercial ventures. 

At the same time, outsourcing, which Indian IT has
shown works for American firms, is being explored as a
possibility in space as well. 

“We have perfected and standardised the two-tonne
class satellite’s platform,” says a senior ISRO
official, “which can be customised to go with any
payload.” 

The platform typically comprises 60 per cent of the
weight of a satellite and supports the payload, which
forms the actual mission of a satellite. “There are
very few manufacturers who have a proven platform with
a space heritage.” 

So, US firms are being offered the attractive option
of having ISRO build platforms very cost effectively
for payloads of their choice. This could open up a new
revenue stream for ISRO’s marketing arm, Antrix, which
last year did sales of nearly Rs 300 crore. 

As part of the process of becoming bigger, ISRO has
been raising its engagement with private companies to
make parts for satellites, rockets and even rocket
fuel for its missions. 

“Today we have a robust network of private companies
who supply products and services. Up to 70 per cent of
the value of any given project is accounted for by our
private sector partners,” ISRO officials say. 

The year saw ISRO get a more public image, not the
least because its first inter-planetary mission, the
Chandrayaan moon mission, got the nod from the Centre.


A second launchpad at Sriharikota reached near
operational stage and ISRO publicised plans to build
an entirely new two-and-a-half stage launch vehicle
that would give it the capability to put satellites
weighing four tonnes in geo-transfer orbits.
Christened the GSLV Mark III, would be built over the
next four years. 

ISRO is working on two other projects. One is the
Space Capsule Recovery Experiment and air breathing
engines. The latter, involving what are called
scramjet engines, has perhaps a time frame of 20 years
for its development. 

The idea was to make launches cheaper by getting at
least a part of the rocket to get its oxygen from the
atmosphere instead of carrying it along in liquid
form. Presently experiments are at very initial
stages, ISRO says, though it has conducted some tests
on the ground. 




IANS   



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