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India's space economy poised to reach USD 40 billion by 2040: Union Minister Jitendra Singh

Union Minister Jitendra Singh said that at present India's space economy is just about USD 8 million, which is predicted to rise up to USD 40 billion by 2040.

Edited By: Ashesh Mallick @asheshmallick07 Thiruvananthapuram Published on: November 26, 2023 10:42 IST
Dr Jitendra Singh, India's space sector, ISRO, Gaganyaan, Chandrayaan 3, Aditya L1
Image Source : X/DR JITENDRA SINGH Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology Jitendra Singh

India’s space economy is all set to reach USD 40 billion by 2040, and scientists will also enjoy a better working environment, Union Minister Jitendra Singh said. The Minister of State for Science and Technology & Atomic Energy and Space (Independent Charge) said that some foreign agencies like the AKD have predicted that this figure could even rise up to USD 100 billion by 2040. He said that India’s space economy at present is “not very impressive” with just about USD 8 million.

“But we are moving in quantum jumps, and in the foreign satellite launch alone, we have earned about EUR 230–240 million for launching European satellites and about USD 170-180 million for launching American satellites,” Singh said after inaugurating the 60th-anniversary celebrations of ISRO's rocket launch in Thiruvananthapuram on Saturday (November 25).

Singh said that with the establishment of the National Research Foundation, Anu Sandhan, a better model of similar foundations existing in US, a significant industry presence could be established.

"With this, more than 70 per cent of our space resources are going to come from the non-government sector. So, this is also going to supplement our resources," the minister said.

Jitendra Singh on resource crunch

The Minister agreed with the fact that India did confront a resource crunch in its space sector, and said that India could tide it over with the “great scientific acumen we have”.

"We could even overtake other countries with that. Although they were the first to land a human on the Moon, Chandrayaan was the first to detect the H2O molecule," the Minister said.

He hailed Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s 'courageous' call to open up the space sector to private players and said that it has been a “game-changer”.

"This has supplemented our resources both fund-wise and knowledge-wise," Singh added. He said the opening up of the sector also helped popularise the concept of space science in the country.

"The entire nation got involved in Chandrayaan. It was like the whole of science plus, the whole of the government plus, the whole of the nation," Singh said.

Future plan

He mentioned Gaganyaan human spaceflight mission as the next significant development in the Indian space programme. ISRO recently conducted one of the tribal flight tests successfully.

He said by 2025, India would be sending a man to space and bringing him back safely.

"Two to three months before it, we will have a female robot going to space, which could mimic all the actions of an astronaut," the Minister added.

(With PTI inputs)

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