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Shouvik Das

Startups plan satellite assembly facilities

On 18 November, Hyderabad-based Skyroot Aerospace became India’s first private firm to launch its own rocket. (PTI)

While Bengaluru-based Pixxel is in the process of building a facility to assemble satellites, Hyderabad-based Dhruva Space said it is in the final planning stages, with construction expected to start early next year. Pixxel’s plant should be ready by the first half of next year, according to the company.

Others are also foraying into the sector. IIT-Madras-incubated Agnikul Cosmos has procured land in Chennai for its own test bed facility, while Bellatrix Aerospace has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Karnataka government to procure land for building a propulsion and thruster manufacturing facility.

The plans of Dhruva and Pixxel follow the successful launch of demonstrator satellites of both startups on the Indian Space Research Organisation’s (Isro) Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV) on Saturday ahead of the start of potential commercial space projects in the future. Pixxel and Dhruva’s satellites were successfully deployed in their intended low-earth orbits.

Satellite manufacturing is an integral part of India’s plans for the space sector. The government’s liberalized space policy, said to be in the final stages of completion, is expected to allow local firms to take a larger share of the global space market. Currently, India has only a 2% share of the global space economy, Jitendra Singh, minister of state for science, technology and earth sciences, said in Parliament in August.

Pixxel and Dhruva Space are also part of a growing crop of homegrown private space startups that are launching the final trial phase of their products and services. On 18 November, Hyderabad-based Skyroot Aerospace became India’s first private firm to launch its own rocket. India’s upcoming space policy is expected to invite more participation from such startups, reducing the workload for Isro and boosting the domestic industry.

Awais Ahmed, chief executive of Pixxel, said the new facility would produce bigger satellites. The PSLV carried Pixxel’s satellite called ‘Anand’, a prototype of a similar satellite it plans to make in the future. Demonstrator satellites are smaller and lighter, while final versions will be more complex and hence larger and heavier.

“These small satellites are 15 kg in weight and work as demonstrators for the kind of high-resolution data and analytics that we can provide from our constellation. But, the final satellites that will be part of our constellation will be 50kg each, for which we would need a new facility — work on which will be completed by the first half of 2023," Ahmed said.

Pixxel eventually plans to launch a total of 20 satellites, which will provide imagery data to study climate change, measure leaks in gas pipelines, and for other purposes. Meanwhile, Dhruva’s Thybolt-1 and 2 satellites, deployed by Isro, were precursors to the kind of satellites that it can build, said Chaitanya Dora, chief financial officer.

“We eventually plan to offer complete and indigenous manufacturing solutions for satellites, components and ground stations for companies. We’ve already received our first commercial contract worth 20 crore to build satellites, which requires us to step up our abilities," he said, adding the company has sufficient capital to execute the first stage of the project. It will likely raise a fresh round next year, he said.

That said, both companies plan to use their facilities to contribute to early-stage commercial contracts from around the world. Pixxel said it has so far received early-stage contracts from firms like global mining major Rio Tinto, Australian agri-tech firm DataFarming and most recently, the Telangana state government. Dhruva didn’t disclose client names.

The senior executive of a venture capital (VC) firm, which has invested in space startups here, said that manufacturing facilities could be a heavy investment upfront for space startups that are still at an early stage. “However, given that they would need to have the scale of satellite manufacturing if they are to attract global clients, such investments would be critical for the immediate future of these space businesses," he said.

Pratip Mazumdar, founder and partner at early-stage VC firm, Inflexor Ventures, which has invested in Indian space startups Bellatrix Aerospace, said this is an ideal time for space firms to make investments towards setting up capital facilities.

“Procedures of land acquisition take a long time, in terms of the processes involved. You have In-Space (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorization Center), the nodal enablement body for space under the union government, and Isro, supporting the sector," he added.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Shouvik Das

Shouvik Das is a science, space and technology reporter for Mint and TechCircle. In his previous stints, he worked at publications such as CNN-News18 and Outlook Business. He has also reported on consumer technology and the automobile sector.
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