People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol. XXXVI
No. 41 October 14, 2012 |
India’s
Satellite Launch Capability: Problems Remain Raghu THE
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) saw the
successful launch of its
latest communications satellite, GSAT-10, on September 29.
There were the usual
celebrations and claims of new records testifying to CHRONIC
PROBLEMS STILL
PLAGUE ISRO Some
might argue with this perspective, and see it as a
reflection of an unfortunate
Indian tendency to bemoan the gloomier side of Behind
the GSAT-10 success lurk several chronic problems that
continue to plague ISRO.
Three
major problems confront WAITING
FOR
GSLV
The
continued absence of ISRO’s Geosynchronous Satellite
Launch Vehicle (GSLV) is
hurting the country’s space programme badly. ISRO has not
succeeded in fully
developing its indigenous cryogenic rocket engine to power
the GSLV. On the
occasional GSLV launches till now, ISRO has made do with
Russian cryogenic
engines but it has only left now. The
GSLV enables launch of heavy satellites or other payloads,
and placing them at
high altitudes of around 36,000 km in circular 24-hour
orbits synchronised with
the earth’s rotation such that the satellites are
stationary over Depending
on the payload, effective communications satellites would
typically weigh
around two to four tonnes, calling for a powerful rocket
engine with adequate
lift capability. If manned flights are to be attempted as
ISRO plans, such
capability is absolutely essential. In
any case, VIRTUE
OUT OF
NECESSITY Instead,
ISRO has fallen back on repetitive launches of the Polar
Satellite Launch
Vehicle (PSLV), now a well-proven and reliable work-horse.
It can launch only
smaller satellites of around 1000kg or less and place them
in near-earth orbits
coming down to only around 800km above the earth. Such
satellites are useful
for remote sensing, mapping, weather monitoring etc, and
several countries are
now finding ISRO’s PSLV an inexpensive option for
launching satellites with
such payloads. However, the big money in commercial
launches is in
communications satellites, and high-quality surveillance
too requires
geostationary satellites. PSLV’s
reliability too is proving to be of commercial value but,
given limitations of payload
mass and orbital altitude, the returns too are limited.
PSLV C-21, the 100th
launch by ISRO this September watched by PM Manmohan
Singh, launched the French
earth observation SPOT-6 satellite weighing about 700 kg
and orbiting at around
832 km going over any spot on earth about once every 26
days. But when India
wanted to send up its latest communications satellite
weighing 3,400 kg, it had
to hire the Ariane launcher at roughly Rs750 crore or
about double of what it
would have cost on an Indian launcher. Absence of the GSLV
means not only that Some
of the recent PSLV launches have been sub-optimal. ISRO
used a PSLV with
strap-on boosters for the Chandrayaan-1 launch, using a
slingshot method where
the payload vehicle is launched into space from a
particular orbital position
using momentum and gravitational forces to propel the
craft. ISRO is planning
to use the same sling-shot method to launch its Mars probe
in 2013, but the
craft is very small with provision only for very light
payloads, meaning that
not very significant scientific experiments can be done,
and it will insert the
craft into a highly elliptical orbit which brings it close
to mars only
infrequently and for short intervals. If ISRO had waited
for GSVL as originally
planned, the Mars mission would have been far more
meaningful. Making
a virtue out of necessity may be all right, and the lay
public might be
impressed by boasts of having beaten TRANSPONDER
CRISIS
Partly
due to not having the GSLV, and partly due to poor
planning, GSAT-10
has 30 transponders for communications application. 12
high-power transponders
are in the Ku-band which is crucial for Direct-to-Home
(DTH) television and for
numerous VSAT (Very Small Aperture Terminal) operators who
provide telephone
and internet broadband services carrying data, voice and
video communications.
Users may also include banking and security organisations.
12 more transponders
are in the C-band and 6 in the extended C-band, all used
by public and private
TV signal providers. In
all, Globally,
over 6,000 transponders are said to be available, with a
projected increase of
around 30 per cent projected over the next five years.
India’s media, mobile
telephony and internet boom are expected to experience a
similar order of
demand expansion, which ISRO has totally failed to meet.
Opportunities are
going a-begging, revenues are being lost and a huge
potential boost to the
economy and to a variety of commercial and social services
is being foregone
due to lack of launch and satellite infrastructure. And
one has not even
discussed the defence-related demand. This
demand-supply has also opened the doors to short-cuts and
the possible
undesirable dealings as witnessed in the controversial
deal struck by ISRO’s
commercial arm Antrix, with Dewas Corporation, for
transponders in the scarce
S-band. Leasing-in of foreign transponders or satellites,
outsourcing of
launches, all raise the spectre of non-transparent
dealings, crony capitalism
and the like. The
sooner the ISRO can crack the GSLV’s cryogenic engine
problem, and get its act
together on satellites and transponder capacity, the
better. For India’s
communications infrastructure, services, earnings from
space technology and international
prestige based on powerful rather than shallow capability.