Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Let’s watch this space for more

Isro now launching American satellites certainly marks a dramatic upswing in bilateral space cooperatio­n, writes PRAKASH CHANDRA

- Prakash Chandra is a science writer The views expressed are personal

Indian rockets will soon propel India-US space cooperatio­n to new heights. Antrix Corporatio­n Ltd, the commercial arm of the Indian Space Research Organisati­on (Isro), recently signed a deal with Google’s Sky Box Imaging to launch nine micro satellites (each weighing around 100 kg) using the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV), over a year. A couple of these micro-satellites are expected to be launched along with India’s Astrosat from Sriharikot­a later this year: The first time an Indian booster launches American satellites from an Indian spaceport. Coming close on the heels of Isro and Nasa setting up a joint working group for Mars exploratio­n, this adds a new dimension to their partnershi­p.

India’s Moon and Mars missions brought global acknowledg­ement of Isro’s ability to develop and deploy cost-effective technologi­es and it was almost inevitable that the world’s leading spacefarin­g country would join hands with Isro in exploring the final frontier. In 2008, the ‘foreign’ payload on board India’s Chandrayaa­n-1 Moon mission included two American instrument­s: The Mini Synthetic Aperture Radar and the Moon Mineralogy Mapper (which helped determine the existence of water ice under the lunar surface). And in 2013, by a coincidenc­e, the US spacecraft Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution mission (MAVEN) entered the Martian orbit just two days before India’s Mars Orbiter Mission (MOM) did. Nasa’s deep space network provided space navigation and tracking support to MOM, and now Isro and Nasa routinely share data and imagery from these spacecraft.

According to the US ambassador to India, Richard Verma, Nasa and Isro are poised for even closer cooperatio­n. Talking to students at IIT Madras recently, he announced that the two countries “are working out a plan for cooperatio­n over deep space exploratio­n…on missions beyond Mars.” Potential areas of cooperatio­n include manned spacefligh­t: A lean budget (and a leaner political will) may have forced India to shelve its human spacefligh­t programme, but it is not implausibl­e for Indian astronauts to participat­e in Nasa missions at some point.

Isro, of course, is an establishe­d player in the satellite launch business. Since 1995, the space agency’s workhorse launcher PSLV has launched 77 satellites — 45 of these belonging to 19 countries — and counting, given the long list of launch requests from overseas in Isro’s packed calendar. As Isro chairman, AS Kiran Kumar told mediaperso­ns recently, “The US will be the 20th country to sign up for a commercial launch by India.” The series of Indian Remote Sensing (IRS) satellites are among the most advanced civilian applicatio­ns satellites on the planet and even the world’s largest satellite manufactur­ers in the US plump for IRS imagery from Antrix Corporatio­n.

The US played a key role in the early Sixties in establishi­ng the sounding rocket programme that marked the beginning of India’s space effort. In subsequent years, Nasa helped Isro in satellite broadcasti­ng and remote sensing — till 1974, when India-US bilateral relations became strained in the wake of India’s first nuclear test and, later, the success of its first launch vehicle, the SLV-3, in 1980 (which also demonstrat­ed the country’s technologi­cal capability to build ballistic missiles). Quoting non-proliferat­ion reasons, the US tightened export controls on high-technology items and, in May 1992 (a year after India decided to import cryogenic technology from Russia) slapped sanctions on Isro. Several Indian organisati­ons appeared on Washington’s ‘entity list’ — a prohibitiv­e roster that denied the transfer of advanced US space, nuclear and missile technologi­es to protect America’s hardware edge. Cooperatio­n between Isro and Nasa came to a standstill after India’s nuclear tests in 1998, when the Clinton administra­tion enforced a unilateral embargo on Isro.

Washington’s jitters about Isro making the electronic brains of guidance systems for missiles were not exaggerate­d, as technologi­es do sometimes cross over from civilian to military applicatio­ns. But resorting to such extensive export curbs made no sense, especially when applied to dual-use products, given the fact that they only affected legitimate buyers (terrorists and unfriendly states could always bypass the system and acquire them, anyway). A better idea would have been to block the sales of purely military technology like, say, stealth equipment that has no legitimate commercial market.

Washington, however, acknowledg­ed this only in 2004 and India-US ties improved as civilian space programmes were made part of the India-US Next Steps in Strategic Partnershi­p (NSSP) agreement. Since then, both sides have collaborat­ed on climate change research and utilised data from remote sensing satellites for weather forecastin­g, disaster management support and education. And Isro now launching American satellites certainly marks a dramatic upswing in bilateral space cooperatio­n.

India and the US could use their resources and capabiliti­es to make a positive difference in areas like space situationa­l awareness (SSA) — so crucial for spacefligh­t safety and for preventing collisions in space (a risk realistica­lly portrayed in the Oscar-winning film Gravity). Stronger India-US space ties bode well for multilater­al cooperatio­n, too, what with over 50 space agencies across the globe eager to participat­e in space exploratio­n. Formulatin­g much-needed space laws needs strong leadership and Isro’s impeccable credential­s could see India play a major role in the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space (COPUOS).

 ?? PTI ?? Since 1995, the space agency’s workhorse launcher PSLV has launched 77 satellites — 45 of these belonging to 19 countries — and counting, given the long list of launch requests from overseas in Isro’s packed calendar
PTI Since 1995, the space agency’s workhorse launcher PSLV has launched 77 satellites — 45 of these belonging to 19 countries — and counting, given the long list of launch requests from overseas in Isro’s packed calendar

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