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India-Pakistan
India to launch 3 more foreign satellites
2007-05-11
NEW DELHI - India, which placed an Italian satellite into orbit last month, plans to launch three more foreign satellites, a government minister said on Thursday. “The Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) has already signed agreements for putting into space three more foreign satellites,” Prithviraj Chavan, a minister in the prime minister’s office, told parliament.

Chavan did not elaborate on the agreements or disclose when the satellites would be launched, but said ISRO was focusing on such commercial ventures. “ISRO’s marketing arm, Antrix Corporation, is being encouraged to promote the commercial use of capacity available on Indian space systems,” Chavan said in parliament’s upper house.

On April 23, an Indian-made rocket launched with ItalyÂ’s Agile astronomical satellite and put in into orbit in ISROÂ’s first commercial venture aimed at carving a slice of the global multi-billion-dollar space launch market.

India wants to compete with the US, Russia, China, Ukraine and the European Space Agency in offering commercial satellite launch services, a market worth up to 2.5 billion dollars a year. However, Chavan said ISRO’s “capabilities and developing alliances for global marketing will be considered only after meeting national needs.”

ISRO has designed and built launch rockets to reduce its dependence on overseas space agencies, but has only recently begun exploring commercial spin-offs.
All the while quietly building expertise, quality control, and systems to ensure that Indian IRBM and ICBM missiles will be completely up to Western standards.
Posted by:Steve White

#3  India may delay its own launches to accommodate the foreign customers..
it seems the 2007 AstroSAT launch has been dealyed to 2008.

Astrosat

ASTROSAT is currently proposed as a multi-wavelength astronomy mission on an IRS-class satellite into a near-Earth, equatorial orbit by the PSLV. The 5 instruments on board cover the UV(1000-3000 A), soft and hard x-ray regimes (0.3 - 8 keV; 2 - 100 keV). This will be the first dedicated Indian astronomy satellite.
Posted by: John Frum   2007-05-11 06:32  

#2  On April 23, an Indian-made rocket launched with ItalyÂ’s Agile astronomical satellite

Photos of the bird and launch vehicle assembly here

PSLV - C8 Mission Photo Gallery

While the international rates for launching a satellite ranged between $10,000 and $15,000, Antrix charged $ 29,000 a kg because Agile had to be put in a specific orbit of about 550 km at a low inclination of 2.5 degrees to the equator, said Mr. Sridhara Murthi. This was a difficult orbit and inclination to achieve, and hence the premium rates.

G. Madhavan Nair, ISRO Chairman, said the accuracy of the PSLV-C8 mission could be gauged from the fact while the vehicle was to put Agile into a circular orbit 550 km above the earth at an inclination of 2.5 degrees, what was achieved was an orbit between 549 km and 551 km at an inclination of 2.46 degrees. "For any launch vehicle, it is a remarkable achievement," he said. It proved the performance of the PSLV-C8's navigation, guidance and control systems.
Posted by: John Frum   2007-05-11 06:19  

#1  One of these foreign satellites is the Israeli synthetic aperture radar spy satellite Polaris (formerly TechSAR).

There are reports that an "unnamed" country has co-funded TechSAR development in exchange for one of the birds. It seems this country is India. Other reports claim that India bought one of the Israeli Ofeq optical spy satellites and that Israel and India will share imagery from their birds.
Posted by: John Frum   2007-05-11 06:10  

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