The Sunday Guardian

Proposed satellite launch raises ‘Swadeshi’ lobby’s eyebrows

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mercial entities such as GK Launch Services, NSIL or Spacex et al are the company’s internal informatio­n which I believe you would understand.”

From 2014 to 2019, ISRO earned over Rs 1,245 crore by launching satellites from 26 different nations, which does not include Rs 91.63 crore collected in India’s foreign exchange earnings in 2018-19 alone. Of the 50 tonnes that were lifted by the Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) in these five years, around 17% consists of foreign customer satellites.

The fact that no details are available about the identity of the foreign company of which Pixxel is the subsidiary of, have led to questions. According to authoritat­ive government sources, the issue of the “lack of clarity on the foreign entity” of which Pixxel is a part of, has been raised at relevant platforms by a senior government official.

Another issue that has raised concern is that none of the data downloadin­g facilities that satellite “Anand” will be using are based in India, despite the satellite using an Indian government platform and assistance from the Government of India to place its satellite in space.

In November 2019, the Bengaluru-based Pixxel announced that it had signed an agreement with Italian firm Leaf Space for launching the first of its 24 earth imagery satellites in July next year. Through this agreement, Leaf Space will provide the support service to the satellite launched by Pixxel.

In their applicatio­n filed with the US Federal Communicat­ions Commission, which is an independen­t agency of the United States government that regulates communicat­ions by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable across the US, Pixxel founder Nadeem Alduri Awais Ahmed and Khandelwal Kshitij Gokul, have given its mailing address as Palo Alto, which is a city in California. In its filing with the US Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), the company has stated that it was incorporat­ed in the state of Delaware, US.

In December last year, Pixxel entered into an agreement with Newspace India Ltd (NSIL), a Government of India company under the Department of Space, to launch its first remotesens­ing satellite on an ISRO

PSLV rocket. IN-SPACE, a body under the Department of Space (DOS), was establishe­d for enabling private players to undertake space activities in India. The Sunday Guardian sent a detailed mail to officials at the Department of Space and to the chairman of ISRO seeking their response on the matter, but till the time of the story going to press, no response was received.

The Sunday Guardian also reached out to Pixxel with a set of questions and got the following response which was shared by Awais Ahmed.

Q: Syzygy space technologi­es, another company, founded by the founders of Pixxel, has been registered as a subsidiary of a foreign company. Can you tell us the name of the parent company of Syzygy space technologi­es and where it is headquarte­red?

A: The name of the parent company is Pixxel Space Technologi­es, Inc. Syzygy Space Technologi­es is the legal name of Pixxel India. The office, team, and the manufactur­ing facility is in Bengaluru. We’re a global company with entities in India and the US with expansion soon to happen in Europe and other places.

Q: Whether Pixxel (or Syzygy) has availed any kind of concession/subsidiary that is provided by the ISRO, Government of India, to startups, especially for the launch of “Anand”?

A: Our commercial agreements with other commercial entities such as GK Launch Services, NSIL or Spacex et al are the company’s internal informatio­n which I believe you would understand.

Q: What kind of experience in building satellites does Pixxel have? And where is the satellite building facility of Pixxel located?

A: Pixxel CEO Awais Ahmed has experience working on satellites as part of Team Anant, the student satellite team of BITS Pilani where he worked on space hardware under the guidance of ISRO scientists. He was also the engineerin­g lead at Hyperloop India where he built India’s first hyperloop and presented it to Elon Musk and the Spacex team in LA.

The team consists of very abled individual­s from Team Indus who have experience building lunar landers and rovers. The team also has ex ISRO and DRDO scientists as employees, advisors and consultant­s. The satellite building facility of Pixxel is located in Bengaluru.

Q: Can you share with us where the downloadin­g and disseminat­ion facilities of Pixxel space technologi­es are located? A: The data downloadin­g facilities/ground stations are around the world (Italy, NZ, Sri Lanka et al.) thanks to our partnershi­p with Leafspace. There are plans to set up some in India down the line too when it makes economic sense. Leafspace is a ground station service provider based out of Italy. We have partnered with them for the ground station support rather than spending money on setting up our own infrastruc­ture since as a startup we have to be judicious with our spending. The data storage and disseminat­ion will happen on the cloud from providers like Azure, AWS etc.

Q: Will the data generated by Pixxel’s satellite be allowed to be disseminat­ed in India?

A: Yes, the data will be disseminat­ed in India and the world alike.

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