India to set Space Station by 2035: Dr Jitendra Singh
India to set Space Station by 2035: Dr Jitendra Singh
New Delhi: The Indian space station -- Bharatiya Antariksha Station (BAS) -- is expected to be set up and running by 2035, said Dr Jitendra Singh, Union Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology.
The MoS said announcements made in the Union Budget 2024-25 relating to the space sector have a futuristic vision. He listed out the ambitious goal of sending an Indian to Space “by the second half of 2025” and landing the first Indian on the Moon by 2040”.
“In 2023, we saw an investment of Rs 1,000 crore. The projection is that the space economy will grow five times in the next 10 years or around $44 billion,” Singh said. This is also expected to prevent “talent that might have gone abroad”
He informed that Gaganyaan -- India’s first human spaceflight mission -- delayed due to Covid, will take flight next year. “The trial flights are going on,” he said. In addition, India is also aiming to send “robot flights, where a female robot, Vayumitra, will be sent to space in 2025”.
The robot will do all the activities of an astronaut, return to Earth, and be extracted from the landing craft. Further, citing the 2023 New Space policy, the Minister said it has liberated the sector in India and has also boosted digital space startups -- from just one in 2021 to nearly 300
Singh noted that the policy opened doors for the private sector to participate in ISRO’s activities, and helped the sector to achieve new heights. “The 2023 new space policy was a watershed moment. For the first time, the private sector was allowed to participate in ISRO’s activities,” the minister said while speaking to the media.