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daniyasiddiquiImage-Explained
Asked: 17/10/2025In: News

Will India successfully build and launch its own space station by 2035?

India successfully build and launch i ...

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  1. daniyasiddiqui
    daniyasiddiqui Image-Explained
    Added an answer on 17/10/2025 at 11:09 am

     A Vision Rooted in Momentum India’s space journey has been steadily gaining speed over the past two decades. From the Chandrayaan-3 moon landing in 2023, which made India the first country to land near the lunar south pole, to the Aditya-L1 mission studying the sun, ISRO (Indian Space Research OrgaRead more

     A Vision Rooted in Momentum

    India’s space journey has been steadily gaining speed over the past two decades. From the Chandrayaan-3 moon landing in 2023, which made India the first country to land near the lunar south pole, to the Aditya-L1 mission studying the sun, ISRO (Indian Space Research Organisation) has demonstrated both reliability and innovation on relatively modest budgets.

    The planned Indian Space Station (Bharatiya Antariksha Station) is based on that momentum. The plan, as provided by ISRO director Dr. S. Somanath, involves placing the first module in 2028–2030, follow-up modules and crew missions leading to full operational capability by 2035. That vision is just part of an even grander plan — one that encompasses the Gaganyaan human spaceflight program, which will send Indian cosmonauts to space in the coming years.

    Why It Matters to India and the World

    A national space station is not a technological achievement. It’s a symbol of freedom in an area long controlled by a handful of space powers — the U.S. (NASA), Russia (Roscosmos), and China (Tiangong).

    To India, it will mean:

    • Scientific sovereignty – the freedom to perform microgravity and life science research independent of foreign platforms like the ISS.
    • Strategic benefit – becoming the leading player in space diplomacy and global partnerships.
    • Economic benefit – driving the national space industry, inspiring private industry, and attracting international partnerships.
    • National pride and inspirational effect on young people – inspiring young people to work in STEM, space technology, and innovation.

    Technical and Financial Challenges To Be Faced

    Creating a space station is not an easy task, however. It needs to be done with cutting-edge technology, long-term funding, and logistical accuracy.

    Some of the key challenges are:

    • Human long-term life support systems – providing oxygen, recycling water, and food processing for astronauts.
    • Autonomous docking and refueling capability – for use by crew and cargo vehicles.
    • Budget certainty – ISRO budget is much lower each year than NASA’s or China’s CNSA, so it has to accomplish more with less.
    • International competition – other countries can advance their posts or offer co-operation, so India must remain nimble.
    • Training and development – astronaut training, space medicine, and ground control infrastructure need to be greatly expanded.
    • Other than that, ISRO’s record of budget creativity — the same one that brought Mars Orbiter Mission triumph at half the price of NASA — could once again play in their favor.

    India does not have to go solo. It is already collaborating with NASA, France’s CNES, and Japan’s JAXA on a series of missions. The new space station could gain from collaborative modules, shared research, and visiting foreign astronauts.

    In the post-ISS phase (the ISS will most likely retire around 2030), the world will see a gap in the low-Earth orbit research centers — and India has a chance to fill part of that. A timely cooperation plan may turn its space station into an international science center.

    The Realistic Outlook

    Considering ISRO’s record, the goal of 2035 is ambitious but within reach — if political backing is continued, economic backing is given, and the Gaganyaan missions are conducted successfully. Assuming all goes as per plan, India may well become the fourth country to possess its own space station, following the U.S., Russia, and China.

    It won’t be simple, but India’s trademark has been achieving the miraculous with simplicity and grit. The mission can redefine India’s international identity — not merely as an emerging economy, but as an emergent space power in a position to lead humankind to its next frontier in space.

    In Summary

    India’s vision to create a space station of its own by 2035 is an exercise in grandiose ambition and pragmatic restraint. The road will be long, marred by issues of engineering and tests of cost. But if ISRO remains true to its tradition of shrewd innovation, incremental development, and international cooperation, the dream can indeed become a beacon of achievement all around the world — a standard of what unadulterated willpower and imagination can achieve.

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