Context
- The Tamil Nadu Cabinet has approved a Space Industrial Policy, becoming the third Indian state—after Karnataka and Gujarat—to adopt a dedicated space policy.
Aim
· To promote growth and attract investments within the space sector.
· In 2023, the Union government introduced the Indian Space Policy 2023, establishing a framework to support the development of the space ecosystem.
· The Indian National Space Promotion and Authorisation Centre (IN-SPACe) recommended that the State government develop its own space policy document.
· IN-SPACe, established by the Department of Space, serves as the central agency responsible for promoting, authorizing, and overseeing the activities of Non-Government Entities (NGEs) in the space sector.
Key Highlights of Tamil Nadu’s Space Policy
· Targets attracting ?10,000 crore in investments over the next five years, along with creating approximately 10,000 direct and indirect jobs within the same period.
· Offers a payroll subsidy for companies engaged in R&D or establishing global capability centres in the space sector.
· Designates select areas as Space Bays, providing structured incentive packages for firms planning investments below ?300 crore.
· Grants industrial housing incentives to space industrial park developers, offering 10% subsidy on residential facility development costs over 10 years, capped at ?10 crore.
· Provides a 25% capital cost subsidy for green and sustainable initiatives within these parks, subject to a maximum of ?5 crore.
Indian Space Policy – 2023
1. Vision & Objectives
- Enhance India’s space capabilities
- Enable a strong commercial space sector
- Promote international cooperation
- Leverage space tech for:
- Socio-economic development
- National security
- Environmental protection
- Scientific advancement
2. Scope & Applicability
- Covers all space activities involving Indian territory/jurisdiction
- Implementation guided by Department of Space (DoS) directives
3. Strategy
- Encourage full private sector participation:
- Satellites
- Ground systems
- Space services
- Public and private users can freely procure space services
4. Role of Non-Governmental Entities (NGEs)
- Authorized activities:
- Design, launch, operate satellites & launch vehicles
- Provide communication, remote sensing, navigation services
- Build & operate ground stations
- Develop space transport, situational awareness, recovery systems
- Conduct asteroid/space resource mining & commercialization
- Collaborate internationally
- Participate in human spaceflight
- Compliance with IN-SPACe regulations mandatory
Roles and Responsibilities of Key Organizations Under the Policy
IN-SPACe (Indian National Space Promotion and Authorization Centre):
An autonomous, single-window agency responsible for:
- Authorizing all government and private space activities.
- Issuing operational guidelines.
- Promoting industry clusters, incubation centers, and accelerators.
- Ensuring equitable access to public space infrastructure.
- Facilitating Non-Governmental Entities’ (NGE) participation in space exploration.
- Managing safety protocols, liability issues, and dispute resolution.
- Enabling technology transfer from ISRO to private sector players.
- Approving dissemination of remote sensing data and launch manifests.
Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO):
Refocused on:
- Research and development of advanced space technologies, human spaceflight, and scientific missions.
- Transitioning operational space systems to industry partners.
- Providing open access to remote sensing data.
- Supporting collaboration between academia and industry.
- Facilitating long-term human presence in space.
NewSpace India Limited (NSIL):
The commercial arm of the Department of Space, responsible for:
- Commercializing space technologies developed by ISRO.
- Manufacturing and procuring space assets.
- Serving government and private sector clients on commercial terms.
Department of Space (DoS):
Functions as the policy coordinator by:
- Ensuring clear role distribution among all stakeholders.
- Overseeing the implementation of the space policy.
- Coordinating international cooperation and regulatory compliance.
- Ensuring operational safety and resolving disputes.
- Maintaining global standards and interoperability in navigation systems.
Significance
- Redefined ISRO’s role to prioritize innovation and research & development.
- Empowered private industry with comprehensive operational rights across the space sector.
- Established a clear, transparent, and well-structured regulatory framework.
- Aligned India’s space policy with international best practices and sustainability goals.