A short history of India’s space programme India’s space programme was established in 1962, a year after John F Kennedy set a target to land an American on the moon by the end of the decade. But it wasn’t until the 1970s and 80s that the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) really got going, using satellites to map and survey crops, monitor damage from natural disasters and erosion, and to bring telemedicine and telecommunication to remote rural areas. The country now has one of the world’s largest space programmes. It designs, builds, launches, operates and tracks the full spectrum of satellites, rockets and lunar and interplanetary probes. It brings priceless prestige to India: witness Modi’s beaming face at the meeting of the Brics emerging nations this week, when he declared the lunar landing “the movement for new, developing India”. He resisted the temptation to draw comparisons with the Russian delegation’s effort – their Luna-25 spacecraft crashed into the moon four days earlier. How India paid for it In short, it operates to a tight budget and manages to outperform expectations. The ISRO has a reputation for parsimony, with Indian space scientists paid one-fifth of the global average, according to a former ISRO chair. And although India’s government allocated the equivalent of £1.3bn for the department of space for the fiscal year ending in March, it spent about 25% less. By contrast, Nasa has a £20bn budget for the current year. In any case, Martin Barstow has no truck with the argument that it’s ridiculous for India to spend anything on space exploration when 10% of its population still live below the $2.15 a day poverty line. “I see this argument all the time and it is really missing the point. The space science bit is a very small fraction of the programme,” says Barstow. Most of it is spent “keeping people alive” on Earth, he adds. “That’s helping people with agriculture, helping people in poor areas who don’t have good communication or infrastructure. It’s really about developing the country.” He hears the same arguments in the UK. “People ask: ‘Why do we do space in the UK? We can spend that money building hospitals.’ But all the money you spend in space isn’t really spent in space. It is spent on the ground. It pays people’s wages, it develops high-tech jobs. It supports economic growth. In the UK, space brings £17bn a year to the economy.” Is it time for the UK to stop sending aid to India? |