Why this matters now
Space-sector reform is a flagship GS-3 example of opening a strategic public-sector domain to private enterprise. Aspirants must distinguish the three new institutional pillars (ISRO, IN-SPACe, NSIL), and link them to the Indian Space Policy 2023, FDI liberalisation, and India’s ambition to grow its share of the ~$500bn global space economy.
The three institutional pillars
| Body | Role |
|---|---|
| ISRO | Focuses on R&D — advanced technology, science missions, human spaceflight — handing over routine operational/commercial work to others. |
| IN-SPACe | Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre — a single-window promoter and authoriser/regulator for private space activity; shares ISRO facilities with industry. |
| NSIL | NewSpace India Ltd — the commercial arm (a CPSE) that owns operational satellites/launchers and runs space on a demand-driven model. |
Indian Space Policy 2023
The Indian Space Policy 2023 formalised these roles and gave private players clarity to build satellites, launch vehicles, ground stations and offer services end-to-end. It positions ISRO to focus on cutting-edge R&D while industry handles operational space. In 2024, FDI norms were liberalised — allowing higher (in some segments up to 100%) foreign investment via the automatic route for satellite manufacturing, components and launch services.
The NewSpace ecosystem
India now has 200+ space startups. Notable milestones: Skyroot Aerospace (Vikram-S, first private rocket, 2022), Agnikul Cosmos (3D-printed engine, Agnibaan), and Earth-observation/analytics firms like Pixxel and Dhruva Space. The model echoes the global shift led by private launch providers — lowering cost and increasing cadence.
UPSC angle
Nail the three-pillar division (ISRO = R&D; IN-SPACe = single-window promoter/regulator; NSIL = commercial, demand-driven). Link to the Indian Space Policy 2023 and 2024 FDI liberalisation.
Frequently asked questions
What are IN-SPACe and NSIL?
IN-SPACe is the single-window promoter and authoriser/regulator for private space activity; NSIL (NewSpace India Ltd) is ISRO’s commercial arm that owns operational satellites/launchers on a demand-driven basis.
What did the Indian Space Policy 2023 do?
It formalised the roles of ISRO, IN-SPACe and NSIL and gave private players clarity to operate across the space value chain, with ISRO focusing on advanced R&D.
Is FDI allowed in India’s space sector?
Yes — 2024 reforms liberalised FDI, allowing higher foreign investment (up to 100% in certain segments) via the automatic route for satellite manufacturing, components and launch services.
How is ISRO’s role changing?
ISRO is shifting toward R&D and frontier missions, handing routine operational and commercial work to NSIL and the private sector.