Indian Space Industry : Updates & Discussions

There's a strong case for the airforce and the navy to buy SAR satellites on fleet mode. But then, they are used to ISRO handouts
 
Let's hope they reach the orbit safely. We have lost 5 high value satellites already.
 
There's a strong case for the airforce and the navy to buy SAR satellites on fleet mode. But then, they are used to ISRO handouts

The MoD has signed a contract with Pixxel for a multisensor eo+sar+hyperspectral small satellite constellation. 12 sats that might be part of SBS-3 or dual use.

Galaxeye had also bid but eventually lost to Pixxel.


That said, Galaxeye plans to offer imaging services commercially to civilian and govt users.
 

Mr.dandhoo is looking to establish a Desi LEO satcom constellation.
Hopefully he supports domestic satellite industry and startups.

Reliance only does backend integration and that's how they grow their business. Hopefully, some really good start up backed by Reliance financially does the job.

L&T, Tata and Kalyani are better engineering companies.
 
Reliance only does backend integration and that's how they grow their business. Hopefully, some really good start up backed by Reliance financially does the job.

L&T, Tata and Kalyani are better engineering companies.
Bharti Airtel seems very confident with their OneWeb/Eutelsat partnership.
 
Project Garud is structured to transition satellite development from bespoke, mission-specific builds to a repeatable and manufacturing-ready model. The platform introduces a flat-pack architecture that enables efficient launch stacking, faster system integration, and improved deployment timelines, making it suitable for large-scale satellite deployments.

Project Garud is intended to serve as a foundational layer in building India’s next-generation Space manufacturing ecosystem, with long-term applicability across LEO, MEO, and future GEO mission architectures.

The project is aimed at addressing the need for an indigenous, production-ready satellite platform in the 300 - 500 kg class that is optimised for scalable deployment. Existing systems are typically custom-built, resulting in extended development cycles and limited reusability. By establishing a Made-in-India architecture, Project Garud reduces reliance on foreign satellite platforms and subsystems while strengthening supply chain resilience for Communications and Intelligence infrastructure.

As part of the programme, Dhruva Space will also establish the infrastructure, tooling, and industrial processes required for high-volume satellite manufacturing at scale. The roadmap is designed around a production cadence capable of supporting up to 2 satellites per day, enabling an annualised manufacturing potential of approximately 500 - 600 satellites across multiple mission configurations. This manufacturing-first approach is intended to support the growing demand for sovereign and secure satellite constellations globally, while strengthening India’s position as a competitive OEM and spacecraft production hub within the global Space economy.