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Protecting India’s Satellites

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Science & Tech

Source: TH

Context: India approved a ₹27,000-crore programme to launch 52 surveillance satellites from 2026.

• Reports suggest India is also considering “bodyguard satellites” to protect its space assets after near-miss incidents.

About: Protecting India’s Satellites:

Need for Protecting India’s Satellites

Vital role – Satellites are the backbone for communication, navigation (NavIC), weather forecasts, internet, defence and surveillance, making them critical for national security and economy.

Multiple threats – They face risks from space debris, collisions, hostile manoeuvres, jamming, spoofing, cyber intrusions, and solar storms that can disrupt services or destroy satellites.

High costs – Launching and maintaining satellites involves billions; protecting them ensures return on investment and safeguards India’s strategic autonomy.

Initiatives Taken:

IS4OM Centre (Bengaluru) – Tracks Indian satellites and issues timely alerts for possible collisions, enabling manoeuvres to prevent accidents.

Project NETRA – Expanding India’s space surveillance with radars and telescopes to build indigenous space situational awareness capabilities.

Aditya-L1 Mission – Observes the sun to forecast solar storms and coronal mass ejections that could damage satellites’ electronics and shorten orbital lifespans.

CERT-In Guidelines (2025) – Mandate strong encryption, network segmentation, and cyber hygiene protocols to safeguard satellites from hacking attempts.

IN-SPACe Licensing – Ensures private space firms adopt safety standards so that commercialisation of space remains secure and reliable.

Debris-Free Space Mission by 2030 – India’s pledge to avoid space debris creation and adopt sustainable practices announced at IADC 2024.

Bodyguard Satellites

What it is? Special satellites designed to escort and shield India’s high-value orbital assets from external threats. Monitor close approaches – They can detect when foreign satellites or debris move dangerously close to Indian spacecraft. Warn against manoeuvres – Capable of identifying suspicious activities such as shadowing or hostile proximity operations. Physical intervention – May reposition themselves or the protected satellite to prevent collisions or jamming. Global alignment – Reflects global defence trends where major powers are developing proximity and protection satellites.

• Special satellites designed to escort and shield India’s high-value orbital assets from external threats.

Monitor close approaches – They can detect when foreign satellites or debris move dangerously close to Indian spacecraft.

Warn against manoeuvres – Capable of identifying suspicious activities such as shadowing or hostile proximity operations.

Physical intervention – May reposition themselves or the protected satellite to prevent collisions or jamming.

Global alignment – Reflects global defence trends where major powers are developing proximity and protection satellites.

Challenges:

Technological – Requires advanced sensors, AI-based autonomy, and precision manoeuvring not yet fully mastered by India.

Financial – Developing and deploying escort satellites involves high costs, demanding sustained budgetary commitment.

Cybersecurity – Ground stations and user terminals remain weak links vulnerable to hacking or spoofing attacks.

Geopolitical – Deployment of defensive satellites may trigger mistrust or arms race in outer space among global powers.

Sustainability – Protecting satellites must not worsen the problem of orbital debris or overcrowding in space.

Way Ahead:

Indigenous SSA tech – Invest in LiDAR-based and radar satellites to strengthen India’s ability to track debris and hostile movements.

Anti-jamming systems – Develop encrypted signals, hardened waveforms, and autonomous avoidance technologies for resilience.

Public–Private partnerships – Leverage start-ups and private industry to innovate low-cost solutions for satellite safety.

Global engagement – Actively participate in COPUOS, IADC and multilateral platforms to promote responsible space behaviour.

Defensive-first strategy – Focus on sustainable, non-weaponised measures that ensure security without escalating conflict.

Conclusion:

Protecting satellites is no longer optional but a strategic imperative for India’s security and economy. A layered defence of technology, governance, and diplomacy is essential. With careful planning, India can secure its orbital assets while championing peaceful, sustainable use of space.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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