India plans manned Moon mission, space station


India Prime Minister Narendra Modi tells space agency officials they must develop plans for a series of missions to the Moon. – EPA pic, October 18, 2023.

INDIA would send a man to the Moon and set up a space station by 2040, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said, as the country ramped up its space programme.

The leader’s announcement came as the world’s most populous country prepared for a key test flight due Saturday for its first crewed space mission.

Modi told space agency officials they should “build on the success of Indian space initiatives”.

The country “should now aim for new and ambitious goals, including setting up ‘Bharatiya Antariksha Station’ (Indian Space Station) by 2035 and sending the first Indian to the Moon by 2040”, he said in a statement late yesterday.

Modi asked them to develop plans for “a series of missions” to the Moon.

India runs a low-budget space operation. It became the first to land a craft near the largely unexplored lunar south pole in August and, a month later, successfully launched a spacecraft to observe the outermost layers of the Sun.

In 2014, India became the first Asian nation to put a satellite into orbit around Mars, and its space agency Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) launched 104 satellites in a single mission in 2017.

India’s current focus was on its first manned mission into outer space, called Gaganyaan or “Skycraft”.

The three-day mission, expected to take place next year, was set to send a three-member crew into Earth’s orbit at a cost of about US$1.08 billion (RM5.12 billion), said Isro.

The country has also planned to launch a probe to the Moon with Japan, land a craft on Mars, and send an orbital mission to Venus within the next two years.

India has been steadily matching the achievements of established spacefaring powers at a fraction of their cost.

Experts said India could keep costs low by copying and adapting existing technology, and thanks to an abundance of highly skilled engineers who earn a fraction of their global counterparts.

India said it only accounts for 2% of the US$386 billion global space economy, a share it hoped to increase to 9% by 2030. – AFP, October 18, 2023.


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