Millennium Post

ISRO plans to scale up outsourcin­g, double satellite launches

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

HYDERABAD: The Indian Space Research Organisati­on (ISRO) is planning to double the launch frequency of satellites built by it by scaling up outsourcin­g to industry to meet growing demand, officials say.

Mylswamy Annadurai, the director of ISRO Satellite Centre (ISAC), the prime agency for realising satellites for the Indian space programme, said ISRO now launches nine to 10 spacecraft built by it per year.

“Requiremen­ts have gone up. We also have to fill up the backlog. We are targeting to double the launch frequency to 18 per year from 2018-19,” Annadurai said.

He said ISRO’S experience with the industry has been reasonably good, and vendors are “very enthusiast­ic” in increasing their contributi­on in the space programme.

According to ISRO, the participat­ion of the industry in realisatio­n of space systems such as spacecraft, launch vehicles, establishm­ent and operations of ground support systems and facilities, and implementa­tion of applicatio­n programmes for the benefit of end users have been steadily growing. ISRO Chairman A S Kiran Kumar said the space agency does as much activity as possible with the industry.

“Wherever it’s possible to get the things done through the industry, we are doing and it will only increase in the coming days because we need to do more frequent activities.

There will be an increase in the usage of industry for the activities,” he said.

The chairman said 80 per cent of work relating to launch vehicles (rockets) is done by the industry, whose contributi­on in building of satellites is in the range of 30 to 35 per cent.

“Effort will be to keep increasing it. Finally, (eventually) we feel (only) eight to ten per cent of activities will have to be done within the organisati­on (and the rest outsourced to industry),” he said.

“Depending on the capability of the industry to take up more and more job (work), it will be done, and as they become more and more capable, the activities will shift to them,” he said.

The ISRO, Kiran Kumar said, is also looking at the possibilit­y of building a PSLV in a joint venture with a set of industry partners by 2020-21.

“Processes are on. We have to go through a number of clearances...submitting to the government and getting clearances. We are working on that,” he said. He said ISRO is addressing to resolve bottleneck­s in increasing the launch frequency of satellites.

“If we have to do 12 to 18 launches per year, progressiv­ely we will see what’s limiting that and then work on it. Right now, second (launch) vehicle (rocket) assembly building is what is causing that, and that’s getting ready and by the end of this year, it should become operationa­l,” he added.

ISRO has been associated with more than 500 small, medium and large-scale industries while implementi­ng various space programmes. So far it has transferre­d about 300 technologi­es to Indian industries for commercial­isation.

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