ISRO is gearing up to triple its spacecraft production by 2025 and launch Chandrayaan-4 in 2028. The lunar mission will attempt India’s first moon sample return, while the broader expansion aims to boost India’s share in the global space economy and deepen private sector participation.
ISRO charts high-growth trajectory with lunar milestones and industrial scale-up
In a major push to scale India’s space capabilities, ISRO Chairman V. Narayanan has announced plans to triple spacecraft output by 2025. The move is part of a broader strategy to expand India’s presence in the global space economy, where it currently holds a modest 2 percent share. The goal is to raise this to 8 percent by 2030.
A key highlight is the government-approved Chandrayaan-4 mission, scheduled for 2028. Unlike its predecessors, this will be India’s most complex lunar mission yet—designed to bring back samples from the moon’s surface. ISRO also plans seven more launches this financial year, including a commercial communication satellite and the first PSLV fully built by Indian industry. The Gaganyaan human spaceflight mission remains on track for 2027.
Major takeaways
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ISRO to triple spacecraft production by 2025 to meet rising demand
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Chandrayaan-4, a lunar sample return mission, scheduled for 2028
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India targets 8 percent share in global space economy by 2030
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Seven launches planned this fiscal, including industry-built PSLV
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Expansion aligns with Gaganyaan human spaceflight mission in 2027
Sources: The Hindu BusinessLine, LiveMint, Moneycontrol, India Today