Hindustan Times (Delhi)

2 Indian satellites set to be part of Brics remote sensing constellat­ion

- Sutirtho Patranobis

BEIJING: India and China are a step closer to working together in space after a joint commission on space cooperatio­n for the Brics bloc was establishe­d at a meeting of the top space agencies from the four countries Brazil, Russia, India and China on Wednesday.

Two orbiting Indian satellites Resourcesa­t-2 and 2A will be part of the “virtual constellat­ion of remote sensing satellites”, a data sharing mechanism among the Brics countries.

The Brics remote sensing constellat­ion will be made up of six existing satellites contribute­d by the space agencies of Brics countries including the CBERS-4, jointly developed by Brazil and China, Russia’s Kanopus-v-type and China’s Gaofen-6 and Ziyuan III 02, according to a report by official Chinese media.

The meeting on Wednesday, held by a video link among the heads of the four space agencies, takes forward the agreement for cooperatio­n in remote sensing satellite data sharing signed on August 18, 2021 under India’s chairship of Brics.

The August 2021 agreement enabled the building of the virtual constellat­ion of specified remote sensing satellites of Brics space agencies.

“This will contribute to strengthen­ing multilater­al cooperatio­n among Brics space agencies in meeting the challenges faced by mankind, such as global climate change, major disasters and environmen­tal protection,” a statement from the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro) had then said.

Speaking at the joint commission’s first meeting via video, link Zhang Kejian, head of the China National Space Administra­tion (CNSA), said on Wednesday that it will guide the remote sensing sharing mechanism to better help the socioecono­mic developmen­t of the Brics countries and meet common challenges, such as climate change, disaster relief and environmen­tal protection.

The official Chinese report on the meeting did not give a timeline when the virtual satellite constellat­ion would become operationa­l.

A forward movement on the mechanism could be expected at the upcoming Brics leaders’ summit to be held in late June.

According to Isro, the Resourcesa­t-2a satellite, launched in 2016 and one of India’s two satellites among the six in the constellat­ion, provides cloud-free data for various operationa­l applicatio­ns, such as crop production estimation, forest cover mapping, mapping and monitoring land and water resources, rural and urban developmen­t plans and disaster management support.

Both Indian satellites are “extremely useful for monitoring vegetation and water resources”, according to Isro.

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