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Antrix Corporation, the commercial arm of Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro), has orders from seven countries to launch 28 satellites, but may struggle to take more business as the space agency faces capacity constraints, including the lack of heavier rockets.
Isro, which has emerged as a globally competitive launch provider, uses its workhorse rocket Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (Pslv) to hurl research and earth observation satellites in the lower earth orbit. Pslv has launched 45 satellites for foreign customers, including Friday’s launch of the five British satellites for a unit of EADS Astrium, Europe’s largest satellite maker.
"If we are looking for more launches for commercial purpose, one of the issues we need to tackle is the capacity to build more and do launches in a given time,” A S Kiran Kumar, Chairman of Isro said. “We are working on increasing the frequency of launches from Sriharikota and also trying to increase the realisation of a larger amount of large vehicles in a given time".
Isro sends an average of three rockets a year from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDCC), India’s spaceport at Sriharikota, near Chennai. In 2015, it has scheduled four rocket missions including two that it has already launched.
The space agency is also constrained by the slow progress in building the homegrown Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV), the rocket that can hurl communication satellites in 36,000 kms into space.
Isro’s first success was in January 2014 when GSLV Mk-II with an indigenous cryogenic upper stage placed an experimental communication satellite into space. This came after nearly two decades of development, couple of failures and delays due to US sanctions on Russia for sharing cryogenic engine to India. Isro needs two more launches of GSLV-MkII that can carry two tonne communication satellites even before it can send its own commercial communication satellites using the rocket to space.
Isro uses the services of Arianespace, the European rocket firm that has capabilities to launch heavier satellites to hurl its communication satellites.
In December, Isro tested a technology demonstrator of GSLV Mk-III, a bigger rocket that can carry 4-tonne satellites to space. India’s Humanspace flight programme or sending a man to space also depends on the progress of GSLV-MkIII rocket.
"So far we have been doing four to five launches a year and we need to go up to 10 launches a year," Kumar said. The existing launches include sending commercial satellites on Arianespace rocket.
Antrix says they have 28 more satellites from six to seven countries to be executed in next three years. “And more and more customers are coming to us for launch," said V S Hegde, chairman cum managing director, Antrix Corporation Ltd. This year, there would be one more commercial launch, of satellites from Singapore, he added.
@Rain Man @Guynextdoor2 @danish_vij @anant_s @SR-91 @levina @Ryuzaki @Dash @SRP @jbgt90 @jaatram @Chanakya's_Chant and others
This is the problem with every Indian Companies. Prepare a good product without a sincere production line!!
Isro, which has emerged as a globally competitive launch provider, uses its workhorse rocket Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (Pslv) to hurl research and earth observation satellites in the lower earth orbit. Pslv has launched 45 satellites for foreign customers, including Friday’s launch of the five British satellites for a unit of EADS Astrium, Europe’s largest satellite maker.
"If we are looking for more launches for commercial purpose, one of the issues we need to tackle is the capacity to build more and do launches in a given time,” A S Kiran Kumar, Chairman of Isro said. “We are working on increasing the frequency of launches from Sriharikota and also trying to increase the realisation of a larger amount of large vehicles in a given time".
Isro sends an average of three rockets a year from Satish Dhawan Space Centre (SDCC), India’s spaceport at Sriharikota, near Chennai. In 2015, it has scheduled four rocket missions including two that it has already launched.
The space agency is also constrained by the slow progress in building the homegrown Geosynchronous Satellite Launch Vehicle (GSLV), the rocket that can hurl communication satellites in 36,000 kms into space.
Isro’s first success was in January 2014 when GSLV Mk-II with an indigenous cryogenic upper stage placed an experimental communication satellite into space. This came after nearly two decades of development, couple of failures and delays due to US sanctions on Russia for sharing cryogenic engine to India. Isro needs two more launches of GSLV-MkII that can carry two tonne communication satellites even before it can send its own commercial communication satellites using the rocket to space.
Isro uses the services of Arianespace, the European rocket firm that has capabilities to launch heavier satellites to hurl its communication satellites.
In December, Isro tested a technology demonstrator of GSLV Mk-III, a bigger rocket that can carry 4-tonne satellites to space. India’s Humanspace flight programme or sending a man to space also depends on the progress of GSLV-MkIII rocket.
"So far we have been doing four to five launches a year and we need to go up to 10 launches a year," Kumar said. The existing launches include sending commercial satellites on Arianespace rocket.
Antrix says they have 28 more satellites from six to seven countries to be executed in next three years. “And more and more customers are coming to us for launch," said V S Hegde, chairman cum managing director, Antrix Corporation Ltd. This year, there would be one more commercial launch, of satellites from Singapore, he added.
@Rain Man @Guynextdoor2 @danish_vij @anant_s @SR-91 @levina @Ryuzaki @Dash @SRP @jbgt90 @jaatram @Chanakya's_Chant and others
This is the problem with every Indian Companies. Prepare a good product without a sincere production line!!
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