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India’s private space industry shoots for the stars

Thomas Barnes by Thomas Barnes
July 16, 2026
in Economy
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Since opening the sector to private players in 2020, India has become home to more than 400 space startups. ©AFP

Bengaluru (India) (AFP) – Private companies are reshaping India’s space ambitions, building rockets and satellites as the country pushes to capture a bigger share of the global space economy. Since opening the sector to private players in 2020, India has become home to more than 400 space startups, attracting upwards of $500 million in investment, including $150 million in the last year alone. For entrepreneurs such as Skyroot Aerospace co-founder Pawan Chandana, the transformation is reaching a critical moment. Skyroot plans to launch India’s first privately developed orbital-class rocket before August 4, signalling the country’s arrival as a serious commercial space contender. “It’s a milestone for Skyroot and for India,” Chandana told AFP.

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India currently values its space economy at $8.4 billion, about three percent of the global market, but aims to increase that figure fivefold within seven years. The country’s ambitions are built on decades of investment by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), whose low-cost missions have earned global recognition. India became the first Asian nation to place a spacecraft into Mars orbit in 2014 and in 2023 achieved a soft landing on the Moon — only the fourth nation to do so. Private companies say that legacy has provided the foundation for startups to boom. “We are standing on the shoulders of what has been built for 60 years,” said 35-year-old Chandana, who left a secure job at ISRO to co-found Skyroot in 2018.

– Thriving startups – Skyroot became the first startup to partner with ISRO and in 2022 launched India’s first privately built sub-orbital rocket. Its sprawling “Infinity” campus in Telangana has the capacity to build one orbital rocket every month, reflecting how rapidly the private ecosystem has expanded. Chandana credits the country’s “fundamental foundational elements” and well-established launchpads as key elements for Skyroot’s success. “It is the most convenient atmosphere to have like over a thousand thriving startups do various things,” he said.

The private ecosystem extends well beyond launch vehicles. In Bengaluru, Pixxel Space is building hyperspectral imaging satellites that provide Earth observation data to commercial customers and government agencies in India, Europe, and the United States. Backed by investors including Google, Pixxel uses its data for applications such as monitoring soil health and mining sites. Founder and chief executive Awais Ahmed said opening the sector allows ISRO to focus on research and exploration while private firms pursue commercial opportunities. “We take up the mantle of saying we will build and operate satellites that are commercial in nature,” he said. “Not only for data that is required within the country’s agencies…but also exporting that service globally.”

Recent geopolitical conflicts have driven demand for satellite imagery across the globe, said Suyash Singh, founder of Earth observation satellite company GalaxEye, highlighting the increasing overlap between space and security. “We don’t have direct requests from the governments. But there were requests from people who are channel partners in those particular countries,” he told AFP, adding that they had been tapped for every recent conflict. “Our focus in the short term or the near future is more towards defence,” he said.

– ‘Toe-to-toe’ – Last week, GalaxEye announced it had lost contact with Drishti, India’s largest privately built satellite and the world’s first multi-sensor OptoSAR satellite. But the failure has not deterred Singh, who called the experience “fantastic.” “Space is unforgiving…Building a satellite of that class, India has never done at least in a private context. And we were able to do that.” By around 2030, Singh wants to be a “full-fledged constellation, beaming down data and serving the entire globe.” “Space has to become India’s success story,” he said.

Despite growing momentum, founders say challenges remain. Access to specialised talent and capital continues to be difficult, making government backing crucial. Ahmed said there was still a long way to go for India to be “toe-to-toe” with countries like the United States and China. “The government needs to step in for a sector like this and say, ‘we will be the risk-taker, we will be the initial backer’,” said Ahmed. Chandana echoed that view, saying government agencies could become “anchor customers” for emerging firms. “Very large private companies in this sector are national assets…the way SpaceX is for the US,” he said.

© 2024 AFP

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